Los Angeles Times

Harris’ changing role in Senate

A partisan before, she will need GOP help to further Biden agenda.

- By Noah Bierman and Jennifer Haberkorn

WASHINGTON — During four years in the Senate, Vice President- elect Kamala Harris used high- profile, partisan moments to propel her political career, grilling President Trump’s Cabinet secretarie­s over hard- line immigratio­n policies and Supreme Court nominee Brett M. Kavanaugh over abortion rights and sexual assault allegation­s ahead of his 2018 confirmati­on.

But as she and Presidente­lect Joe Biden prepare to take office next month, their ability to bridge such rifts with Senate Republican­s will determine whether they can pass much of their agenda — not least, bold policies to expand healthcare access, revitalize the economy and combat climate change — and get approval of Biden’s appointees.

Although Democrats have a majority in the House, Republican­s will either retain control of the

Senate with as many as 52 votes or form a potent 50member minority, depending on the results of two Jan. 5 runoff races in Georgia. Biden and Harris will almost certainly need support from at least some Republican senators to win any votes — a tall order.

Biden speaks at almost every turn about his four decades in the Senate, and the bipartisan achievemen­ts in that time, but it is Harris’ recent, especially divisive experience that is arguably more relevant to their prospects for legislativ­e bonhomie.

Since Biden left the chamber in 2009 to become vice president, the body in which even f ierce partisans often came together to make deals has devolved into a place so polarized that passing just about any significan­t legislatio­n is rare. Biden overlapped with only a third of the current members.

With little chance to work on important bills and more power concentrat­ed in the hands of Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.), many senators have calculated — like Harris — that they can achieve more by playing an outside game: using their platform to please their political base rather than to forge bipartisan alliances to cut deals.

“Reaching across the aisle used to get you plaudits in a campaign,” said Jeff Flake, a former Republican senator from Arizona. “Now it just gets you a primary.”

Flake, who declined to seek reelection in 2018 amid the party backlash after he broke with Trump, said he had few interactio­ns with Harris, though he served on the Judiciary Committee with her for two years and was one of the few Republican­s inclined to negotiate with Democrats. The committee, which was the platform for many of Harris’

most viral moments, is among the most polarized in the Senate — not conducive to fostering bonds among senators from opposite parties, Flake said.

Though Biden ran for president on the promise that he could restore a sense of bipartisan comity, most Senate Republican­s — including McConnell — refused even to acknowledg­e his victory for more than a month after the election. And they remained silent or even complicit as President Trump stoked false claims that he was the rightful winner, encouragin­g a majority of Republican voters to doubt Biden’s legitimacy.

Biden has indicated that he is eager to take a large role in negotiatin­g with the Senate once he is sworn in, given his past relationsh­ips with

its most senior members. Yet McConnell, with whom Biden overlapped for a quarter- century, spoke with the president- elect for the f irst time on Tuesday, when Biden called him to thank McConnell for his belated congratula­tory remarks that day in the Senate.

Biden has said Harris will be a governing partner, a role he had under President Obama. Yet in Senate negotiatio­ns, Biden often took the lead; Obama, like Harris, had spent less than one term there and did not develop many relationsh­ips. Vice President Mike Pence, a former House member, has at times been Trump’s liaison to senators, but, with their party in control, the role has been less critical. Harris’ exact role in the Senate, where the vice president is the

body’s titular president but mainly serves as a tiebreaker, has not been made clear and could well depend on the issue.

Harris can perhaps be most valuable to Biden in providing a fresher eye on the Senate. “It is probably important for him to have that kind of f irsthand experience about the ‘ new Senate’ inside the White House,” Sen. Christophe­r S. Murphy ( D- Conn.) said.

Harris is generally well liked on both sides in the Senate. But she has no significan­t legislatio­n to her name, and interviews with senators and aides suggest that Harris’ time in the Senate did not buy her much goodwill among Republican­s.

She is not known to have any substantiv­e relation

ship with McConnell, who will determine whether the administra­tion’s initiative­s even get a vote if Republican­s retain at least one of the Georgia Senate seats.

“She’s someone who I think had aspiration­s for higher office to start with and probably wasn’t spending a lot of time in the Senate,” said Sen. John Thune ( R- S. D.), McConnell’s top deputy.

“She wasn’t here very long,” Sen. John Cornyn ( RTexas) said dismissive­ly. “She’s a very pleasant person. But I’d be hard- pressed to think of — has she achieved any legislatio­n since she’s been in the Senate?”

Sen. Ron Johnson ( RWis.), who chaired the Senate Homeland Security Committee on which Harris served, offered similar sentiments, pointing to her politicall­y charged turns questionin­g administra­tion officials as her most memorable mark.

“She was like a prosecutin­g attorney, and I didn’t really work with her on anything,” Johnson said.

Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski, one of the few Republican­s known for working across party lines, concurred. Murkowski instead noted that she had a long- standing relationsh­ip with Biden. “When I came in, Biden had been here for already 20 years prior to me,” she said.

In her political memoir, “The Truths We Hold,” Harris laments that lawmakers behave differentl­y when the television cameras are turned off, pointing to her service on the Senate Intelligen­ce Committee, where much of the work is classified and done behind closed doors.

“It is invigorati­ng, even inspiring,” she wrote. “It is a scene I wish the American people could see, if just for a moment. It is a reminder that even in Washington, some things can be bigger than politics.”

But she notably mentions few of her Senate colleagues by name in the book, which was published in 2019, just before she announced she was running for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination. She writes only f leetingly of what she called a friendship with Sen. James Lankford ( R- Okla.), whom she credits with crossing the aisle during a debate to discuss race — specifical­ly, her view that race is the nation’s “Achilles’ heel,” and his that racial healing starts with breaking bread together.

Harris’ aides point to bills she worked on with Republican senators — one with Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul to encourage states to reduce cash bail requiremen­ts for people awaiting trial, and another with Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina to make lynching a federal crime. She also helped lead an effort to propose policing changes after the killing of George Floyd in late May, but bipartisan negotiatio­ns crumbled.

Tellingly, representa­tives for Lankford, Paul and Scott either declined requests for comment or did not respond.

One former Harris aide said Harris came to the Senate eager to court Republican­s and did not give up, but learned quickly that such relationsh­ips matter little with McConnell, who coldly looks at everything through a political lens.

He refused, for example, to let the Senate vote on the cash bail bill. The lynching bill was approved by the Senate but has not become law because it has not been reconciled with a different House- passed measure.

During Harris’ Senate career, Republican­s controlled the White House and the Senate. McConnell made f illing judicial vacancies his priority, and little legislatio­n passed beyond what was needed to keep the government funded. The Republican­s’ most substantiv­e policy priorities were repealing Obama’s signature Affordable Care Act — an effort that failed — and passing a tax cuts package that become law in late 2017.

Harris, alongside other Democrats, opposed both efforts.

For signs of hope, her aides point to the congratula­tory f ist bumps that some Republican­s gave Harris when she returned to the Senate after her election last month.

But for many Democrats, the lasting impression was not the f ist bumps but Republican­s’ weeks- long refusal to publicly acknowledg­e the victory, for fear of crossing Trump and their party’s base.

That behavior has provoked worries among Democrats that neither Biden nor Harris will f ind a way to cut deals.

“The sad reality is that relationsh­ips don’t matter anymore,” said Adam Jentleson, who was an aide to former Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid and is the author of a forthcomin­g book, “Kill Switch: The Rise of the Modern Senate and the Crippling of American Democracy.”

“The more important factors are the macro forces at work on senators,” he added. “And foremost among them is polarizati­on.”

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? KAMALA HARRIS grills Brett M. Kavanaugh, a partisan moment that raised her profile as a senator. As vice president, she will have to bridge rifts with Senate Republican­s to push the Biden administra­tion agenda.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press KAMALA HARRIS grills Brett M. Kavanaugh, a partisan moment that raised her profile as a senator. As vice president, she will have to bridge rifts with Senate Republican­s to push the Biden administra­tion agenda.

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