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Harris’ first taskn: Get emboldened Democrats to fall in line

- BY ERIK WASSON & BILLY HOUSE With assistance from Steven T. Dennis, Christian Hall, Bill Allison and Akayla Gardner /Bloomberg

There is no playbook for the coming weeks. But among the most urgent battles ahead is rapidly conveying to the US public a fuller and more compelling portrait of a woman who, despite her high office, has mostly been a minor supporting character in the political dramas that have occupied the nation. Republican­s will try to present her as a villain.

TIME is short, party tension is high, and many congressio­nal Democrats on Sunday rushed to rally behind Vice President Kamala Harris as their pick for the top of the ticket.

The vice president’s first task in formally securing the Democratic presidenti­al nomination will be to corral her former congressio­nal colleagues, newly emboldened after a successful pressure campaign to force their party’s leader, Joe Biden, off the 2024 ballot.

Biden couldn’t leverage the deep relationsh­ips and ties developed over five decades in Washington to stave off the calls for him to step aside in the race against Donald Trump. For Harris, that could be even more daunting, as she barely touched down in the US Senate in 2017 before launching her first bid for the presidency.

Harris’ weak ties leave little time to build the kinds of unwavering alliances that she could rely on in political combat. But she wasted no time, making calls to Hill Democrats Sunday to shore up support.

“This is a sprint,” California Senator Laphonza Butler, a close Harris ally, said in an interview. “She is making the calls to make sure that people know what she said in her statement: that she’s ready to earn this nomination.”

Joe Manchin, the West Virginia senator who tussled with Biden over policy and became an independen­t this year, emerged as a potential challenger. He’s “seriously considerin­g” returning to the Democrats to run for the presidenti­al nomination, adviser Jonathan Kott said Sunday.

There is no playbook for the coming weeks. But among the most urgent battles ahead is rapidly conveying to the US public a fuller and more compelling portrait of a woman who, despite her high office, has mostly been a minor supporting character in the political dramas that have occupied the nation. Republican­s will try to present her as a villain.

Harris spent much of her career as a prosecutor and served as California’s attorney general before winning her Senate seat in 2016. She made history as the first woman vice president and would do so again if elected president.

Powerful roles

DEMOCRATIC lawmakers will play powerful roles in presenting the portrait and helping build her a political following, along with either helping consolidat­e her party support or feeding opposition. They’ll be calibratin­g how closely to join their political fortunes to her candidacy.

And they’re acutely aware of Harris’ strengths, as well as the problems her nomination could create for the party.

Harris has had her share of difficulti­es throughout her career in national politics, including some self- inflicted wounds.

Her bid for the 2020 nomination began with lofty expectatio­ns, but it flamed out before the Iowa caucuses as she struggled to convey a clear message to voters and her operation was plagued by infighting.

As vice president, she’s been criticized for her role addressing the root causes of migration as crossings at the Us-mexico border surged.

But after Biden endorsed Harris on Sunday, former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the party’s 2016 nominee, quickly followed suit. So did members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, as did some other notable Democrats, progressiv­e Senator Elizabeth Warren and Pramila Jayapal, who leads the Congressio­nal Progressiv­e Caucus.

The top two Democratic leaders in the Senate— Chuck Schumer and Dick Durbin—as well as House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries didn’t explicitly back Harris in early statements Sunday.

As a senator, Harris, 59, drew praise for her lawyerly grilling of Trump’s three Supreme Court nominees during his first term. But her voting record was cautiously centrist and her career as a prosecutor made many progressiv­es skeptical.

New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez, a progressiv­e who supported Biden’s reelection campaign even in its final days, pledged her “full support” for Harris.

“Now more than ever, it is crucial that our party and country swiftly unite to defeat Donald Trump and the threat to American democracy,” she said on social media.

Other Democrats had urged against an anointed successor to Biden and argued for creating an abbreviate­d contest before and during the Democratic National Convention in late August.

“I would support Kamala Harris as the nominee. But I think she has to earn it,” Representa­tive Adam Smith, a Washington Democrat, told an audience at a Politico event Thursday.

Lawmakers skeptical

SMITH isn’t alone. Other congressio­nal leaders of the effort to oust Biden said they weren’t sold on Harris. While these lawmakers don’t control the convention process, they are highly influentia­l.

They have a lot at stake. Control of both the House and the Senate hang in the balance and is sure to be heavily influenced by voters’ response to the top of the ticket.

Democratic Representa­tive Lloyd Doggett, the first to publicly call on Biden to step aside, on Sunday said Democrats should consider “all talented individual­s who wish to be considered.”

Manchin, the last senator to call for Biden to stand down, called for an “open process” in a CNN interview hours before the president bowed out of the race.

He criticized what he portrayed as the Democratic Party’s leftward drift, saying: “You know what? They need to win me back.”

Limited polling

LIMITED polling on Harris at the top of the ticket supports worries of such Democrats. An Insider Advantage poll out Thursday found Harris faring worse than Biden in matchups in Pennsylvan­ia, Nevada and Arizona.

Her work on immigratio­n has led to Republican­s calling her the administra­tion’s “border czar.”

California Governor Gavin Newsom, Pennsylvan­ia Governor Josh Shapiro and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, whose names had been in the mix, endorsed Harris on Sunday.

There are others, however, who say skipping over Harris would be a mistake. That base of support includes fellow California­ns and members of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus.

Pennsylvan­ia Representa­tive Summer Lee called Harris an “obvious choice” and California Representa­tive Jared Huffman said it “needs to be” Harris. Florida’s Kathy Castor backed Harris and called her a “fighter.”

Republican­s ready

REPUBLICAN­S say they are ready to turn their attacks to Harris once Biden is out of the way.

Republican pollster Anthony Fabrizio speaking to a Milwaukee audience outside the Republican National Convention said she is largely a blank canvass for Republican campaign gurus.

“She is for a vice president fairly undefined,” he said. “We’re ready to define her.”

At least one prominent Republican supported Harris in the past. Before launching his own political career, Trump made two donations totaling $6,000 to Harris’ 2014 reelection campaign for attorney general of California, state campaign finance records show. Harris’ campaign donated the sum to charity in 2015, after she won her second term.

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