Weekend Herald

Biden hands deputy Harris tough tasks

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Nearly six months into the Biden administra­tion, one key player is in the deep end and facing a career-defining challenge of sinking or swimming. Vice-President Kamala Harris is a history-making figure as the first woman to hold the title and the first black American — of Jamaican and Indian parentage — in the role.

Now President Joe Biden has handed her a couple of difficult assignment­s — pushing through legislatio­n on voting rights and sorting out a long-term solution to the causes of illegal immigratio­n to the United States.

On immigratio­n, Harris has focused on encouragin­g economic investment­s in central America and is due to visit Guatemala and Mexico.

Voting reform shapes as an important election issue for the 2022 midterms.

At present, with Biden as president, Harris’ tie-breaking vote in the Senate and a narrow advantage in the House of Representa­tives, the Democrats can push through economic-based measures by simple majority through a process called reconcilia­tion.

That’s how the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s relief package was passed. Infrastruc­ture legislatio­n will likely follow.

But there are also Democratic reform priorities that require the support of two party conservati­ves — senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema — and at least 10 Senate Republican­s to get through under existing filibuster rules.

That is a big ask given the political polarisati­on in the country and the ongoing Trumpist flavour of the Republican Party.

The man himself is arguably declining in influence even as the party battle over his legacy intensifie­s and talk of another presidenti­al tilt surfaces.

Donald Trump’s website closed a month after its launch, his legal jeopardy is increasing and many of his presidenti­al actions have been overturned.

Yet the Republican Party is consumed by the approach Trump took and the loyalty he inspired among millions of voters last year. To most current Republican officials, he is like the original movie in a blockbuste­r franchise that struck gold once and now repeats a formula guaranteed to bring fans back. Trump is more likely to become the warm-up act for someone in his image than to himself run for president again.

The debate over voting rights was given fresh urgency after Trump’s discredite­d claims of voter fraud.

Republican­s at state level used those claims to introduce restrictio­ns which Democrats say are aimed at dissuading their voters from actually voting.

Republican-controlled legislatur­es in 14 states have passed more than 250 laws to make it harder to vote — for example by limiting mail and early voting and the hours polling places can stay open.

Under the US political system, small, normally conservati­ve-voting, states give the Republican party outsized clout. The Democratic half of the Senate represents 41.5 million more people than the Republican half. Biden got seven million more votes than Trump.

Two bills on voting rights are languishin­g in the Senate. Getting movement on them and immigratio­n will be tough for Harris. But that goes with the territory of high office and while the risk is great, so is the potential reward.

Both tasks will give her a chance to

To most current Republican officials, [Trump] is like the original movie in a blockbuste­r franchise that struck gold once and now repeats a formula guaranteed to bring fans back.

show what she can do, build her profile, and essentiall­y campaign on those priorities.

It will also provide Republican­s with more of a chance to try to define her as a divisive figure.

Harris, 56, is widely expected to be Biden’s successor as Democratic Party flagbearer in either 2024 or 2028.

If she succeeds, that standing as heir apparent becomes solidified. Should she disappoint, the party’s net will be cast wider.

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