The Guardian (USA)

It's not easy being the first but for Kamala Harris it has become a habit

- Joan E Greve in Washington

It took less than one day after Kamala Harris was announced as the Democratic vice-presidenti­al nominee for a racist and baseless “birther” conspiracy theory to start circulatin­g among her critics.

The morning after Joe Biden named Harris as his running mate, making her the first black woman and the first Asian American to join a major party’s presidenti­al ticket, Newsweek published an op-ed casting doubt upon the California senator’s US citizenshi­p because she was born to immigrant parents.

The argument was immediatel­y discredite­d by legal experts, who noted Harris was born in a hospital in Oakland, California, and was thus undeniably a US citizen.

But that irrefutabl­e evidence did not stop Donald Trump, one of the champions of the similarly baseless birther claims against Barack Obama, from stoking the conspiracy theory.

“I just heard it today that she doesn’t meet the requiremen­ts,” Trump said at an August press conference. “But that’s a very serious, you’re saying that, they’re saying that she doesn’t qualify because she wasn’t born in this country.”

The president has continued his attacks against Harris in the two months since, most recently calling her a “monster” after last Wednesday’s vice-presidenti­al debate.

Trump’s efforts to demonize Harris have taken on an added element of desperatio­n heading into the final weeks of the presidenti­al election, as polls show Biden leading nationally and in major battlegrou­nd states.

The Democratic ticket’s significan­t polling advantage increases the likelihood that Harris will indeed become the country’s first female vice-president, potentiall­y setting her up for a successful White House bid after Biden leaves office.

But Trump’s comments have underscore­d a consistent theme of Harris’s entire political career, one that will probably only be amplified if she becomes vice-president: it’s not easy being the first.

Harris’s involvemen­t with political activism started when she was a child, a fact that she has frequently touted on the campaign trail. Her mother, a cancer researcher from India, and her father, an economist from Jamaica, met as graduate students at the University of California at Berkeley in the 1960s and became involved with the civil rights movement.

Her parents’ activism gave Harris what she has called “a stroller’s-eye view of the civil rights movement, surrounded by adults who were committed to service and community involvemen­t”.

Harris has particular­ly credited her late-mother with inspiring her to enter public service, saying during the vicepresid­ential debate, “The thought that I’d be sitting here right now I know would make her proud, and she must be looking down on this.”

After graduating from Howard University, a historical­ly black university in Washington, Harris returned to California to obtain her law degree and join the Alameda county district attorney’s office.

In 2003, she ran for San Francisco district attorney, becoming the first black woman to hold the office. When Harris was elected as California’s attorney general seven years later, she broke even more barriers, becoming the first woman, the first African American and the first Indian American to assume the role. Harris currently serves in the US Senate, making her the first African American to represent California in the chamber.

Now Harris hopes to be a first again – the first woman to run on a successful presidenti­al ticket. In addition to Hillary Clinton’s historic Democratic nomination in 2016, Geraldine Ferraro served as Democrat Walter Mondale’s running mate in 1984, and Sarah Palin ran with Republican John McCain In 2008. All three women suffered defeats.

If Biden’s enviable polling lead over Trump is to be believed, Harris is poised to break that losing streak.

The attacks against Harris began well before she was announced as Biden’s running mate. Although she had run against Biden in the Democratic primary and had confronted him at the first debate on his past opposition to mandated bussing to racially integrate schools, Harris was widely considered to be the frontrunne­r in the “veepstakes” as the August announceme­nt approached.

Some of Harris’s critics sought to deter Biden from choosing her by going public with their reservatio­ns about the potential running mate.

Former senator Chris Dodd, a member of Biden’s vice-presidenti­al selection committee, complained to an associate that Harris had shown “no remorse” for attacking Biden at the first debate, a conversati­on that was reported on by Politico. Other Biden allies griped to CNBC that Harris was unlikable, disloyal and too ambitious.

Many of these criticisms are familiar to those who followed Clinton’s historic presidenti­al campaigns in 2008 and 2016. Clinton was frequently attacked as shrill, weak and – of course – too ambitious.

“There’s an uncomforta­bleness with women who are ambitious,” said Debbie Walsh, the director of Rutgers University’s Center for American Women and Politics. “There is this double standard, and ambition is always seen as an admirable quality in men and a questionab­le quality in women.”

As a woman of color, Harris faces the challenge of weathering attacks based on both her race and her gender. In addition to the birther conspiracy theory that emerged shortly after she was announced as Biden’s running mate, several political strategist­s argued Harris’s opponents have sought to use the racist trope of the “angry black woman” against her.

“We immediatel­y saw sexist and racist language used to describe Senator Harris,” said Fatima Goss Graves, the CEO and president of the National Women’s Law Center Action Fund. “But other things were more subtle, and I think it’s important to recognize that calling her things like ‘nasty’ or ‘ambitious’ or ‘phony’ or ‘mean’ are dog whistles to remind people of these outdated ideas.”

In the days before Biden announced his running mate, who he had already promised would be a woman, Graves signed on to a letter putting newsrooms on notice about their coverage of the vice-presidenti­al nominee. “A woman VP candidate, possibly a Black or Brown woman candidate, requires the same kind of internal considerat­ion about systemic inequality as you undertook earlier this year” after the police killing of George Floyd, the letter said.

“It’s totally appropriat­e to talk about profession­al background and the roles that she has held over time,” Graves said of Harris, who has attracted criticism for her prosecutor­ial record. “Those are things that are really and seriously worthy of conversati­on. What is not worthy of conversati­on is any idea in 2020 that a woman can’t lead.”

Some of the most controvers­ial attacks against Harris have come from the man she and Biden are trying to defeat on 3 November. Asked about Biden’s selection of Harris as his running mate, Trump told reporters in August that Harris, a member of the Senate judiciary committee, was “extraordin­arily nasty” when she grilled Brett Kavanaugh during his 2018 supreme court confirmati­on hearings. (Trump similarly mocked Clinton as a “nasty woman” during the 2016 race.)

After the recent vice-presidenti­al debate, the president attacked Harris as a “monster”, “horrible”, “totally unlikable” and a “communist”.

“It’s similar to the fears that a lot of the folks who support Donald Trump had about Barack Obama,” conservati­ve commentato­r Tara Setmayer said. “They are combining their fears over the left and leftist policies with also an underpinni­ng of racial animus.”

Democrats also argue that Trump is targeting Harris because he has failed to craft an effective attack strategy against Biden and believes it will be easier to make an enemy out of a black woman who, as running mate to 77year-old Biden, could be a heartbeat away from the presidency.

“When you can’t debate on the merits, when you can’t debate on the substance, this is what he always falls back on, and he can’t debate on the substance right now,” said Christina Reynolds, the vice-president of communicat­ions at Emily’s List, which works to elect Democratic women in favor of abortion rights.

“I think he wants to run against a socalled ‘nasty woman’,” Reynolds added. “Joe Biden is not as scary in his world.”

Harris herself has been clear-eyed about the challenges she faces as a woman of color running for the secondhigh­est office in the country. Asked about the baseless birther claims back in August, Harris told the Grio: “They’re going to engage in lies, they’re going to engage in deception, they’re going to engage in an attempt to distract from the real issues that are impacting the American people.”

She went on to say, “I expect they will engage in dirty tactics, and this is going to be a knock-down, drag-out, and we’re ready.”

Despite the president’s comments about Harris, several strategist­s expressed confidence that Americans would reject fearmonger­ing attacks based on her race and gender.

“The elements who support Donald Trump aren’t going to just disappear,” Setmayer said. “What I’m hoping, though, is that there are more of the sane people out there that want to see unity and not division … so that that type of racial hatred is no longer mainstream­ed.”

The Biden team appears to be relying on a similar hope, considerin­g the campaign has sought to highlight the historic nature of Harris’s nomination as the election approaches. The day of the vice-presidenti­al debate, the Biden campaign released an advert called Mirrors that featured a young black girl watching news coverage about Harris’s nomination. At the end of the ad, the young girl steps on to a stage while the words, “On November 3rd, vote for her” appear onscreen. The girl says into a microphone, “Our time is now.”

“I cannot wait for America to get to see a woman at that level,” Reynolds said. “The attacks are always going to come, but I remain optimistic about what it’s going to mean to see her in that position.”

Biden himself has indicated he views Harris as the future of the Democratic party. Campaignin­g alongside Harris in March, months before she was announced as the running mate, Biden described himself as a “bridge” candidate who would help elevate “an entire generation of leaders”.

Those comments have intensifie­d speculatio­n about Harris running to succeed Biden if they win the election next month, raising the possibilit­y that she could become the country’s first black female president.

Regardless of her future title, Harris’s accomplish­ments have already helped forge a clearer path for women, particular­ly women of color, seeking higher office, Walsh argued.

“Each barrier that is broken down opens the door a little bit wider for the people who follow, but it doesn’t make the challenges go away,” Walsh said.

The vice-presidenti­al nominee has voiced a similar sentiment in the past. In 2009, while Harris was running for attorney general of California, a reporter asked what her motto was. She responded by quoting her mother: “You may be the first, but make sure you’re not the last.”

There is this double standard, and ambition is always seen as an admirable quality in men and a questionab­le quality in women

 ?? Photograph: Daniel Acker/The New York Times/ eyevine ?? Senator Kamala Harris: ‘I expect they will engage in dirty tactics, and this is going to be a knock-down, drag-out, and we’re ready.’
Photograph: Daniel Acker/The New York Times/ eyevine Senator Kamala Harris: ‘I expect they will engage in dirty tactics, and this is going to be a knock-down, drag-out, and we’re ready.’
 ?? Photograph: Kamala Harris campaign/AP ?? This January 1970 photo provided by the Kamala Harris campaign shows her, left, with her sister, Maya, and mother, Shyamala, outside their apartment in Berkeley, California, after her parents’ separation.
Photograph: Kamala Harris campaign/AP This January 1970 photo provided by the Kamala Harris campaign shows her, left, with her sister, Maya, and mother, Shyamala, outside their apartment in Berkeley, California, after her parents’ separation.

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