Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Harris aides hope Senate can limit 50-50 votes

VP-elect’s advisors envision her focusing on executive duties, not just breaking ties.

- By Noah Bierman

WASHINGTON — A pair of Democratic wins in the Georgia Senate runoff election last week put a finer point on Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris’ constituti­onal role as president of the chamber, empowered to break ties.

The victories by the Rev. Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff in Tuesday’s high-stakes races create a 50-50 split between Republican­s and Democrats, including two independen­t senators who caucus with the latter.

The rare circumstan­ce sets Harris up for a starring role on Capitol Hill — presiding at the Senate dais to deliver for the administra­tion the final “yes” vote on key bills, Cabinet confirmati­ons and judgeships.

“It will be a pretty dramatic moment any time she has to come up to the Hill to break a tie, with every move monitored and put on the cable news and put on the Twitterver­se,” said Jim Manley, a former Democratic leadership aide.

At the same time, Harris’ advisors are hoping the Senate duties don’t distract from her other responsibi­lities and priorities too much, hindering travel, dominating her schedule or otherwise interferin­g with her ability to become an active player in the Biden White House.

So although Harris will have a pair of offices in the Senate like previous vice presidents, don’t expect her to be hanging out there all day, supervisin­g debate or trolling committee meetings.

“When there is a need to be up there to be a tiebreakin­g vote, of course she will be there. But the administra­tion wants to work with the Senate” to avoid ties, said one of her advisors, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Much of that strategy is pragmatic. Most bills in the Senate require a 60-person majority because of the filibuster rule. Though many Democrats are pushing to change the long-standing rule as it applies to legislatio­n, it’s unclear when or whether they will have the votes to do so. Filibuster­s have already been removed for Cabinet and judicial confirmati­ons.

But as long as legislatio­n requires 60 votes, Harris’ tiebreakin­g powers won’t be as critical, since Democrats will need to win the support of at least 10 Republican­s.

The real power brokers in the Senate will be incoming Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer, the New York Democrat; soon-to-be Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, the Kentucky Republican; and a handful of moderate senators, such as West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin III and Maine Republican Susan Collins, who can work to build bipartisan coalitions.

Rather than having Harris cooling her heels while waiting for Senate votes, her advisors say it is vital that she be seen as an active participan­t in shaping policy. They want her to spend more time in the White House with the future President Biden, helping on big decisions to end the COVID-19 pandemic and reboot the economy.

Since Harris is the highest-ranking woman and person of color in the Biden administra­tion and quite possibly the next Democratic presidenti­al nominee, it’s a priority among Black voters — a key constituen­cy of the Democratic Party — that she wield real power.

“Black people have won this election for Democrats,” said Arisha Hatch, vice president and chief of campaigns for Color of Change, a political group that advocates for Black representa­tion. “In order for Democrats to continue to win in this way, it means this administra­tion needs to deliver real results that Black people feel in their lives.”

Harris’ Senate gig could get tricky at times. She has been hoping for a busy travel schedule. But some trips abroad may need to be cut short or canceled if she is needed back home to cast a vote or two.

Senate splits like this are unusual. The last 50-50 Senate was two decades ago, when George W. Bush first took office, putting Vice

President Dick Cheney in the tiebreakin­g role. It lasted less than six months because Vermont Sen. Jim Jeffords renounced the Republican Party and became an independen­t who caucused with Democrats, giving them control.

A century ago, it was more common for vice presidents to spend their time exercising their duties as president of the Senate. But that was largely because “they didn’t have anything else to do,” said Joel K. Goldstein, author of “The White House Vice Presidency: The Path to Significan­ce, Mondale to Biden.”

That began to change in the 20th century as the presidency became more powerful and complicate­d in the face of the Great Depression and a pair of world wars.

By the time Richard Nixon served as Dwight D. Eisenhower’s No. 2, leading the Senate was no longer part of the day-to-day routine.

Vice presidents continued to break ties when needed, of course. Vice President Mike Pence broke 13 ties, most on nomination­s. Biden, in eight years as vice president, didn’t break any.

“In this modern period now, when the vice president’s part of the administra­tion and part of the circle,” Goldstein said, “the vice president’s significan­ce is from participat­ing in the policy discussion­s, not from casting the deciding vote.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? KAMALA HARRIS will preside over the first evenly split Senate since 2001. But many supporters, including Black voters, want her to wield more power than that.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times KAMALA HARRIS will preside over the first evenly split Senate since 2001. But many supporters, including Black voters, want her to wield more power than that.

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