The Guardian (USA)

Karen Bass: the progressiv­e congresswo­man who could be Biden's vice-president

- Maanvi Singh in San Francisco

In Karen Bass’s home state, colleagues across the political spectrum sing her praises. Most of America is just getting to know the 66-year-old congresswo­man from Los Angeles who in recent weeks emerged as a top contender to be Joe Biden’s vice-presidenti­al running mate. But in California, Bass has built a reputation as a progressiv­e and a pragmatist – a community organizer who fought police brutality and addiction in Los Angeles and a practical politician who helped dig the state out of a historical fiscal crisis in 2008.

The congresswo­man is “someone who can heal our country – not just from the pandemic, but also from the racial divisions, the economic divisions”, the legendary labor organizer Dolores Huerta told the Guardian.

Biden is expected to announce his running mate in the coming days. When the former vice-president earlier this year committed to choosing a woman to join his ticket, public speculatio­n immediatel­y coalesced around Kamala Harris, the California senator who ran against him in the Democratic presidenti­al primaries.Buzz also circled Susan Rice, the Obama administra­tion national security adviser, and Val Demings, the Florida congresswo­man. But in recent weeks, California­ns who worked with Bass – including Huerta – have openly campaigned for her as vice-president, propelling her to the top of Biden’s shortlist.

Bass’s supporters commend her fierce commitment to advancing social justice, and an easy charm that has helped her win over liberals and staunch conservati­ves alike. But others worry her politics are too far to the left to appeal to moderate voters, as the vice-presidenti­al vetting process resurfaced some of her political controvers­ies – including past comments about the Cuban dictator Fidel Castro that could alienate expats in the political quagmire of Florida.

‘She builds coalitions’

Bass grew up in a Black, middleclas­s neighborho­od Los Angeles, trained as a physician assistant and worked in an emergency room. As the crack epidemic hit LA, she began a substance abuse and treatment center – a non-profit that grew into the Community Coalition, which remains an influentia­l advocacy group in the city.

At a time when the government moved to further criminaliz­e drug possession and violently police Black and brown neighborho­ods, Bass argued addiction was a public health crisis and advocated against the infamous 1994 “tough on crime” law that Biden helped write. She lobbied to replace liquor shops in South LA with housing and grocery stores, battled to build more schools and campaigned to keep children from being forced into foster care.

She won a seat in the California assembly in 2004 and was elected speaker of the assembly two years later, becoming the first Black woman to lead a state legislativ­e house.

In the state capital, Sacramento, she found herself at the center of a wholly different kind of crisis. Republican­s and Democrats had been locked in a months-long stalemate over how to address a $41m deficit in the aftermath of the Great Recession. “When Karen walked into the negotiatio­ns, it just changed the dynamics in the room,” said Mike Villines, who was the assembly’s Republican minority leader. “She would really listen to everybody, and at first – we even thought – is this a trick?”

Bass held firmly to her goals to minimize cuts to education and healthcare, said Darrell Steinberg, the mayor of Sacramento and the Democratic leader of the state senate at the time. “Yet she was also the epitome of ‘you can disagree strongly without being disagreeab­le,’” he said. Steinberg, Bass, Villines and their colleagues won a John F Kennedy Profiles in Courage award for the compromise they reached in February 2009.

The trust Bass built in Los Angeles and in Sacramento propelled her to Congress in 2010. She was elected to lead one of the most diverse districts in California – her constituen­cy in Los Angeles is 25% white, 25% Black, 40% Latino and 8% Asian American. “At a moment when we need to help rebuild our country from crisis, Karen is a builder – she builds coalitions,” Huerta said.

Bass was elected chair of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus in 2018. And in the aftermath of protests following the death of George Floyd, she is leading her party’s effort to reform the police, and, to an extent, reverse the legacy of Democratic policies that unequally incarcerat­ed Black and brown Americans.

The George Floyd Justice in Policing Act she helped develop passed in Congress and was backed by every Democratic representa­tive and three Republican­s. The bill, which is unlikely to be taken up by the Republican-led Senate, curbs “qualified immunity”, a legal provision that shields police. It makes lynching a federal crime, and incentiviz­es local police department­s to ban chokeholds – but it doesn’t defund the police or direct resources away from law enforcemen­t, as activists have long demanded.

“No, I don’t think it’s time to defund the police,” Bass told Fox LA, though she echoed an argument that many supporters of defunding make – that police shouldn’t be the ones responding to every type of emergency. When the government underfunds social programs and healthcare, “police are left to pick up the pieces, and that’s wrong”, she said. “They’re not social workers – why should they be dealing with social, economic and health problems.”

Bass and Biden

Though Biden’s views on policing have evolved since he spearheade­d his crime bill, the duo’s politics still diverge significan­tly. She supports the ambitious Green New Deal to tackle the climate crisis, and Medicare for All as a solution to the nation’s healthcare woes. He prefers more moderate options.

But the two also have a lot in common personally, and philosophi­cally. She, like him, was struck by tragedy early in her political career. In 2006, less than two years after she was inaugurate­d to the California state assembly, her 23-year old daughter, Emilia, and son-in-law Michael died in a car accident.

Bass has discussed the loss with Biden, whose wife and one-year-old daughter died in a car crash in 1972. “The most difficult part of that was – and it was the same with him – when those accidents happened, both of us were in public life,” Bass said in an interview with Ozy. “The world is watching you grieving.”

Like Biden, Bass said she struggled to “carry on” afterwards. “I began to understand how despair led people to just cash it in,” Biden wrote in his memoir about the period following his wife and daughter’s death. For Bass, it was the memory of her daughter that “allowed her to continue”, she said. “Because she would have been very upset with me if I didn’t continue.”

Both politician­s also share a commitment to bipartisan­ship – a motivation or obligation to reach out to those they don’t agree with, and look for common values. The same way Biden’s supporters celebrate his goofball affability, Bass’s colleagues and friends praise her disarming charm. “You can put Karen anywhere, even

 ??  ?? Karen Bass speaks at a press conference about proposed legislatio­n to remove Confederat­e statues from the US capitol. Photograph: Michael Brochstein/Sopa Images/Rex/
Karen Bass speaks at a press conference about proposed legislatio­n to remove Confederat­e statues from the US capitol. Photograph: Michael Brochstein/Sopa Images/Rex/
 ??  ?? Karen Bass votes for the first of two articles of impeachmen­t against Donald Trump on 13 December 2019. Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/POOL/EPA
Karen Bass votes for the first of two articles of impeachmen­t against Donald Trump on 13 December 2019. Photograph: Chip Somodevill­a/POOL/EPA

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