The Commercial Appeal

What Harris pick says of Biden

Former VP gave glimpse of how he may govern

- Susan Page ROBYN BECK/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

The biggest impact of Joe Biden’s choice of California Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate?

It’s likely to be what it tells voters about Biden. Vice presidenti­al candidates almost never affect the outcome of a presidenti­al campaign. No running mate since Lyndon Johnson in 1960 is credited with pushing the ticket over the top, and not even controvers­ial running mates like Sarah Palin in 2008 are blamed for costing the ticket a victory.

Harris’ groundbrea­king qualities may make more of a difference than usual by energizing African American and younger voters in a way Biden has struggled to do. She is both the first Black woman and the first Asian American person on a major party’s ticket, and at age 55 she is a generation younger than her 77-yearold running mate.

But more important, with this choice, Biden gave some signals about his view of the campaign, his approach toward decision-making, and the traits he would bring to governing if he wins.

To govern, first you must win

For a groundbrea­king choice, Harris was also a safe one. She has twice been elected statewide in California and undergone the vetting that is part of the presidenti­al campaign. She has shown herself as a combative debater in the primaries and an effective questioner in Senate hearings.

Biden seemed drawn to the governing possibilit­ies of former U.N. ambassador Susan Rice, but she had never run for elective office. California Rep. Karen Bass had controvers­ies to explain over working in Cuba that had never come up when she was running for Congress in California. Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottom and Rep. Val Demings of Florida were fresh faces, but they had never run statewide, let alone in a national race.

Biden has no interest in shaking up a race the polls show he’s leading. Harris is more likely to follow the Hippocrati­c oath for running mates: Do no harm.

Biden won’t be rushed

Biden initially said he would announce his running mate on Aug. 1, then during the first week of August. Finally, a week after that, he unveiled his choice, with no apology for the delay.

That shouldn’t have been a surprise. He blew past a series of self-declared deadlines to decide whether to run for president in 2016 (when he didn’t) and in 2020 (when he did).

What’s more, his campaign ran a tight ship. The choice didn’t leak before the campaign was ready, sending it out in a blast text to supporters and others who had signed up. That discipline reflects in part the close counsel he keeps: His most trusted adviser is his wife, Jill. It’s also consistent with the don’t-rock-theboat theory of the campaign, which has fared well even as Biden has been forced to spend most of his time at his home in Wilmington, Delaware, because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

He doesn’t hold a grudge

Biden never looked more stunned during the primary campaign than when Harris questioned his record on race, demanding in one early debate, “Do you agree today that you were wrong to oppose busing in America?”

Biden angrily accused her of misreprese­nting his position.

That may have been the high point of her campaign; it was one of the low points for him, and one that was especially unexpected by the Bidens because she had been a friend of Biden’s son, Beau, when both were state attorneys general.

Biden’s decision to tap her as running mate shows a willingnes­s to move past a painful exchange that is sure to be replayed in opposition TV ads.

The contrast on that between Biden and President Trump – who seems to relish grievances – is hard to miss and likely to be more important than whatever Harris had said in that debate.

“It’s very rare for people to actually vote for who they would rather see as vice president of the United States,” said Christophe­r Devine, a political scientist at the University of Dayton, whose book “Do Running Mates Matter?” was published this spring. “They matter mostly in how we evaluate the presidenti­al candidates. The choice of a running mate says a lot about their priorities, about what kind of leadership skills that they want.”

In 1992, Democratic presidenti­al candidate Bill Clinton’s choice of Al Gore, a fellow baby boomer and a fellow Southerner, reinforced the idea that Clinton represente­d a new and more moderate Democratic Party.

The vice presidenti­al candidate can also reassure voters about concerns they may have about the top of the ticket. The academic study by Devine and co-author Kyle Kopko found that voters who thought Biden was ready to become president, if necessary, became less concerned about whether presidenti­al candidate Barack Obama had too little experience for the job.

Voters who thought Palin was ready to be president, if necessary, became less concerned about whether presidenti­al candidate John Mccain was too old for the job. That could be useful for Biden, too.

 ??  ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris were competitor­s at Democratic primary debates but are now on the same team.
Former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Kamala Harris were competitor­s at Democratic primary debates but are now on the same team.

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