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Harris is a vice president-elect like no other

- This editorial originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

The glass ceiling that Sen. Kamala Harris just broke when she became the first woman ever to be elected vice president of the United States may not be the highest in American politics, but it’s as close as they come. Harris also has the distinctio­n of being the first Black and the first Indian American vice president-elect.

President Donald Trump is disputing the results, which are still being litigated in court. Neverthele­ss, electoral politics have almost certainly been changed forever, a mere 100 years after the 19th Amendment guaranteed women an equal place in the voting booth. “I can’t imagine on the Democratic side ever seeing another ticket that is two white men,” says Debbie Walsh, the director of the Center for American Women and Politics at Rutgers University.

In someways, this moment seemed inevitable. Look at the unpreceden­ted number ofwomen— six, including Harris— who ran as Democrats for president this election cycle. A woman was the Democratic nominee for president four years ago. Female voters— particular­ly Black female voters— are essential to Democratic victories. Why wouldn’t there be a Black female running mate?

Well, here’s why: We are not in a post-sexist society— not any more than wewere in a post-racial society in 2009 when President Barack Obama entered the White House or in 2017 when he left it.

So, the elevation of Harris, 56, is a profoundly big deal. It’s made even bigger by the fact that Biden will be the oldest man— at 78— to become president.

If he doesn’t seek a second term, Harris will occupy the pole position in the race to replace him.

Harris is part of a tiny sorority of women— three— who have even been nominated for vice president by amajor party.

The firstwas Rep. Geraldine A. Ferraro, D-N.Y., a former Queens prosecutor plucked from relative obscurity in the House of Representa­tives. Pressured by women’s advocates and believing therewas a gender gap to fill, former Vice President Walter Mon dale picked Ferraro as his running mate to try to spark his struggling campaign in 1984.

Incumbent Ronald Reagan beat them in a landslide. Ferraro died in 2011.

The second was Sarah Palin, the littleknow­n first-term Republican governor of Alaska. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., made the admittedly unorthodox pick of Palin to be his running mate in 2008 in the hope of trimming Obama’s lead in the polls. But the choice backfired after Palin’s inexperien­ce showed through in interviews and on the debate stage, and Obama won easily.

It’s a reminder of the rarity of female vice presidenti­al candidates that Palin, the polar opposite of Harris in politics and beliefs, took to Instagram to offer some friendly, nonpartisa­n advice after Biden announced her selection. “Climb upon Geraldine Ferraro’s andmy shoulders, and from the most amazing view in your life consider lessons we learned.” Palin wrote. Among those lessons: “(D) on’t get muzzled.”

It’s difficult to believe that Harris, a former San Francisco district attorney and California attorney general who made a reputation in the Senate for asking tough questions, would ever let anyone do that. Witness howshe stopped Vice President Mike Pence from talking over her during their debate; that alone makes her a role model forwomen young and old.

But her election is more than just a milestone forwomen. “In a time when we have a battered democracy, it will restore some sense of trust,” says University of Southern California professor Ange-Marie Hancock Alfaro. For younger voters, especially younger Black voters, Harris’ election may be proof that voting— not just protesting— can bring change.

What can Harris do with her new platform? The vice presidency, after all, is a position with little inherent authority.

“I don’t think Kamala Harris will be a marginaliz­ed vice president who will sit over in a corner,” says Walsh. And Biden has made it clear that hew ants Harris to be the same sort of trusted adviser that hewas for Obama. “I asked Kamala to be the last voice in the room,” Biden said.

Nowhe should give her the portfolio with which to use it.

Harris could shepherd the bipartisan commission that Biden has promised to create to study the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary. She could work with the secretary of the Treasury to address inequities in banking and mortgage lending, one of her top issues as attorney general.

With abortion rights at risk, Harris could revive her proposal to give the Justice Department authority to preapprove abortion laws proposed by any state that had enacted abortion restrictio­ns deemed unconstitu­tional by the courts. Or she could work to win support in Congress for legislatio­n to bar states from adopting onerous restrictio­ns on abortion providers and patients.

This editorial board criticized Harris for not taking strong positions on controvers­ial topics when shewas attorney general. As vice president, Harris needs to be a strong voice— and to not let anyone interrupt her when she’s using it.

 ?? ANDREWHARN­IK/AP ?? As vice president, Kamala Harris needs to be a strong voice— and to not let anyone interrupt herwhen she’s using it.
ANDREWHARN­IK/AP As vice president, Kamala Harris needs to be a strong voice— and to not let anyone interrupt herwhen she’s using it.

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