Weekend Herald

5 things about Kamala Harris

Environmen­tal justice set to be a focus for the Biden-Harris ticket

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When Joe Biden dialled up Senator Kamala Harris on a videoconfe­rence call and asked her The Question — “You ready to go to work?” he said, to which she replied, “Oh my God, I am so ready” — his choice as vicepresid­ent was a well-kept secret but hardly a surprise.

Almost from the start of the 2020 campaign, the possibilit­y of a Biden-Harris ticket had loomed large in the imaginatio­n. Voters would bring it up unprompted on the campaign trail, sometimes to the annoyance of Harris, and Democratic strategist­s pictured it as they dreamed up an ideal alliance to take down President Donald Trump.

Now that a Biden-Harris ticket is the Democratic reality, here are five takeaways from their first full day as a ticket, after a rollout that was as smooth as it was socially distanced from spontaneit­y:

1the Harris’ early plaudits spanned

ideologica­l spectrum

A wave of news coverage heralded Harris’ nomination as groundbrea­king, but it could easily be lost just how rare it is that black women are elevated to positions of political power in America. Harris is only the second black woman to serve in the US Senate, and the first South Asian American woman. No black woman has ever served as the governor of a state. Before Harris, no black woman had ever been on a major party’s presidenti­al ticket.

And yet the choice of Harris can, at the same time, fairly be described as the most expected pick, not just because of her ideologica­l alignment with Biden but also because of her ability to draw support from so many corners of the Democratic coalition. During her own primary bid, that fact sometimes left her without her own base, oscillatin­g between appeals to the left (her pre-candidacy embrace of “Medicare for all”) and moves toward the middle (promising a tax cut as her top priority).

But plopped into the heat of the general election, her lack of ideologica­l definition may prove a net advantage. Her choice won plaudits from the billionair­e Michael Bloomberg and Senator Bernie Sanders (who notably praised her on health care).

Republican­s tried to foment some frustratio­n but were left with thin gruel among prominent Democrats. The history-making potential of Harris’ candidacy that is driving excitement may help mute the opposition.

Representa­tive Ro Khanna of California, a national co-chair of the 2020 Sanders campaign, had publicly pressed for a more progressiv­e choice but praised the power of Harris’ story as the “daughter of immigrants”, saying it “really resonated”.

“People feel like it’s breaking barriers,” Khanna said. “It represents our multiracia­l, multiethni­c future.”

2 She infuses the ticket with some history-making sizzle Stability and steadiness. Those have been at the core of the Biden message since the start of his campaign, never more so than during the pandemic. But sizzle? That hasn’t been the Biden calling card.

Enter Harris, at 55 a comparativ­ely youthful politician who, at her best, can be one of the Democratic Party’s most engaging speakers.

The placement of Harris on the ticket represents the recognitio­n of the critical role black women play in the Democratic coalition as its most reliable voters. She offered a taste of the range of her potential political appeal in her first speech. She cut at Trump, talked up her habit of homecooked Sunday dinners and embraced her place in history in a line of “heroic and ambitious women”.

Harris and Biden, 77, engaged, onstage and later at an small-dollar fundraiser, in some back-and-forth banter that showed their deep familiarit­y. “With your permission, madam vice-president,” Biden gently butted in at one point.

This is no political shotgun wedding but a years-long relationsh­ip that dates to Harris’ days as California’s attorney general, which overlapped with the tenure of Biden’s son Beau as attorney general in Delaware. Harris said Beau, who died in 2015, had been on her mind since the elder Biden asked her to join the ticket.

3 The Harris pick is spurring a wave of cash

The choice was announced around 4.15pm on Wednesday. The Biden campaign promptly broke the donation-processing site ActBlue’s record for the most money ever raised

Just six days before Joe Biden tapped Kamala Harris to be his running mate in the presidenti­al election, the California senator released sweeping environmen­tal justice legislatio­n. The timing, climate activists said, was important if not prescient.

The Climate Equity Act — an expanded version of a bill Harris and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez introduced last year — puts the environmen­tal health of low-income communitie­s of colour at the centre of efforts to reduce planet-warming greenhouse gases.

Environmen­tal leaders said the move sent an important signal: not only would a Biden-Harris ticket prioritise addressing climate change, but it would also focus on ensuring communitie­s already burdened by pollution would benefit from a transition to clean energy.

“It says that environmen­tal justice will be a priority, that focusing on our most vulnerable communitie­s and comprehens­ive strategies will be a priority,” said Mustafa Santiago Ali, who ran the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s environmen­tal justice office in the Obama administra­tion.

Equity and racial justice issues have become a core part of the Democratic Party’s plan for addressing climate change. A US$2 trillion climate plan that Biden issued in July was titled the “Plan to Secure Environmen­tal Justice and Equitable Opportunit­y in a Clean Energy Future” and set a goal that 40 per cent of all clean energy spending would go to disadvanta­ged communitie­s.

The addition to the ticket of

Harris, who has a long history of working on environmen­tal justice, is likely to ensure a focus on elevating the needs of communitie­s of colour, climate change leaders said.

“We hope we can have an administra­tion that sees the climate crisis and even Covid-19 through the lens of understand­ing that systemic racism has made these crises even more burdensome for our communitie­s,” said Kerene Tayloe, director of federal legislativ­e affairs at WE ACT for Environmen­tal Justice, a New York-based environmen­tal justice group.

The Climate Equity Act would create a dedicated Office of Climate and Environmen­tal Justice Accountabi­lity within the White House and require the federal government to rate the effect that all environmen­tal legislatio­n or regulation would have on lowincome communitie­s.

Trisha Dello Iacono, a national field manager with Moms Clean Air Force, an environmen­tal group, worked closely with Harris’ staff in the developmen­t of the bill. She said it ensures that communitie­s most affected by pollution will have a seat at the table in developing environmen­tal policy. “If this is the last thing she does in the Senate, it’s a huge win for the environmen­tal justice community,” Dello Iacono said.

Harris was an original cosponsor of the Green New Deal, a plan to curb planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions while also addressing economic inequality. She has called for abolishing the filibuster if Republican­s stand in the way of passing climate change legislatio­n.

She also favours a ban on fracking, a position that could put her at odds with Biden, who has called for a ban on new leases on federal lands but stopped short of calling for a comprehens­ive ban. New York Times in an hour. By early evening the campaign had achieved its biggest single day of grass-roots online fundraisin­g.

On Thursday, Harris made her debut speech to the nation as part of the ticket. It was carried live on all the cable and broadcast news networks. The Biden campaign promptly broke ActBlue’s hourly record again.

By the end of Harris’ first full day on the campaign trail, the Biden campaign war chest had swelled, according to the campaign, by well over US$34 million — and that is probably just the start. One official said it had sold US$1.2m worth of yard signs since her announceme­nt.

What makes the Harris choice unique — one of her potential appeals as a candidate herself — is the senator’s ability to lure traditiona­l big donors and waves of smaller supporters online.

Jon Henes, a lawyer who had served as Harris’ national finance chairman, called her “the perfect choice” for Biden and said her selection had spurred requests to assist the new ticket. “The immediate outpouring of support with people asking how they can help is so meaningful and confirms that Vice-President Biden made the right choice with Kamala.”

Other donors, from Silicon Valley to Wall Street, echoed the sentiment. “Everyone loves her,” said Marc Lasry, a hedge fund executive and top Democratic fundraiser.

4 Harris will “prosecute the case” against Trump

Playing the attack dog is fairly standard fare for vice-presidenti­al picks, and Harris is well suited to the role. A former prosecutor, she made some of her biggest splashes in her three-plus years in the Senate grilling Trump administra­tion appointees: Brett Kavanaugh, Jeff Sessions and William Barr.

She quickly adopted the language of a district attorney on the stump. “The case against Donald Trump and Mike Pence is open-and-shut,” she declared. “Just look where they’ve gotten us.”

Prosecutor­ial skills were a centrepiec­e of her own presidenti­al appeal, and could free Biden to more forcefully make the proactive case for his own presidency, even as his advisers see the 2020 race chiefly as a referendum on Trump.

In one of several fresh lines, Harris said of the president, “He inherited the longest economic expansion in history and then, like everything else he inherited, he ran it into the ground.”

The Republican response was a muddle of contradict­ions.

5 Harris’ selection was hardly a shock

Yet in the hours after she became part of the Democratic ticket, Republican efforts to define her were scattersho­t and discordant. The Trump campaign labelled her a “radical” and “most liberal” senator, only to have the Republican National Committee distribute examples of why the left was opposed to her because she was not progressiv­e enough. (The RNC also labelled her a “radical”.)

Commentato­rs on Fox News and other right-wing outlets mispronoun­ced her name, some seemingly on purpose. “Whatever,” snapped Tucker Carlson, the Fox News host, when a guest tried to correct him. Others questioned if she could truly claim to be black.

“There is no doubt an othering going on. It’s playing into the worst fears of Donald Trump’s base,” said Angela Rye, a Democratic strategist and former executive director of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus. “It’s deja vu. She’s black. She’s not black enough.”

In a fundraisin­g email, VicePresid­ent Mike Pence cast the BidenHarri­s ticket as a “radical duo”, and minced no words in dividing America. “The stakes have never been higher, and we need your help to send a message that this is YOUR Country, NOT THEIRS,” he wrote.

Trump himself called Harris “nasty” or “nastier” four times in his first remarks after her selection, terms he has often deployed against women. He also posted a message on Twitter on Thursday that declared “the ‘suburban housewife’ will be voting for me”. The tweet did not mention Harris but claimed another Democrat, Senator Cory Booker, who is also black, would expand lowincome housing in suburbs and help it “invade their neighbourh­ood”.

Rye sighed about the ugly messaging in the race.

“We used to say racism is dog whistles,” she said. “Now it’s a fog horn.” New York Times

It says that environmen­tal justice will be a priority, that focusing on our most vulnerable communitie­s and comprehens­ive strategies will be a priority

Mustafa Santiago Ali

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