Gulf Today

Doubts over Kamala Harris’ California poll numbers

- Mark Z. Barabak,

In Montana, they describe the state as one small town with a very long main street. People know their politician­s on a first-name basis, and if they’re not necessaril­y considered a friend, they at least have the familiarit­y of a neighbour. California might be described as a collection of various states, with no single thruway. It’s possible to spend a lifetime within its borders and never come remotely close to one of California’s elected statewide leaders, who are most oten seen as strangers, or known by whatever image of them shows up on television. Which helps explain why Vice President Kamala Harris faces such dismal approval ratings among her fellow California­ns.

“Voters don’t know her that well,” said Katie Merrill, a longtime Democratic strategist. And that’s ater four statewide elections. What they do know is largely refracted through the negative publicity Harris has faced as a result of her travails in the White House — less-thansure-footed appearance­s, an onerous porfolio — and her failed 2020 run for president. It’s not a great look and has done nothing to ease the doubts voters had even before California’s junior US senator assumed the vice presidency. A recent poll conducted by UC Berkeley’s Institute of Government­al Studies and co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Times found just 38% of the state’s voters approved of Harris’ performanc­e as vice president, while 46% disapprove­d. That’s a sharp drop from last summer and, not surprising­ly, tracks a similar decline in President Biden’s standing. As Merrill pointed out, “The vice president’s ratings are almost always tied to the president’s ratings. (Biden) is struggling right now so it makes sense that Kamala Harris, as vice president, would also be suffering.”

It’s also typical for a vice president’s approval ratings to lag those of the president. The job, which consists of doing whatever the chief executive wants and never, ever overshadow­ing him, is inherently subservien­t and diminishin­g. That’s true whether the vice president is male, female, white, Black or Asian American. What may be surprising — at least superficia­lly — is the fact that Harris isn’t doing beter among those who presumably have a rooting interest in her success, her fellow California­ns. Home-state pride and all that. But as Harris learned during her ill-fated White House bid, there is no such thing as a favourite son or daughter in California politics. Not long before she quit the 2020 contest, polls showed Harris running a distant fourth among Democratic hopefuls, with support from fewer than 1 in 10 of her fellow California­ns. It wasn’t just Harris; former Gov. Jerry Brown lost the state in two of his three presidenti­al runs.

That’s the nature of California politics. People might come to blows rooting for the San Francisco Giants versus the Los Angeles Dodgers. But no one, outside of immediate family, paid staff and some political activists, develops that sort of devotion to, say, their governor or California’s two US senators. The state is physically huge, and with nearly 40 million residents, the only way to effectivel­y campaign is through TV advertisin­g and social media. That’s not like someone standing in your living room or dropping by your coffee shop to ask for your vote, and it doesn’t make for a very lasting or intimate connection. Harris’ dismal approval rating among Republican­s surveyed in the UC Berkeley poll — just 5% — was no surprise. Nor was her poor standing among voters without a party preference, with just 31% approving. What’s noteworthy was her relatively tepid showing among fellow Democrats. While 61% approved of Harris’ job performanc­e, more than 1 in 5 gave her poor marks for her handling of the vice presidency.

“Democrats have never really warmed up to the idea of her in that post,” said Mark Dicamillo, who directed the poll. “When she ran for president she wasn’t well-received ... and now that she’s vice president it’s kind of the same thing.”

 ?? Kamala Harris ??
Kamala Harris
 ?? Jerry Brown ??
Jerry Brown

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