Boston Sunday Globe

Why are Republican­s so obsessed with Kamala Harris?

- By Renée Graham Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her @reneeygrah­am.

Republican­s gleefully share every poll that claims Vice President Kamala Harris has the worst ratings of any person to hold the position she currently occupies. They can’t stop talking about her. Fox News has YouTube “shorts” — a kind of bootleg TikTok — that list Harris’s so-called “cringewort­hy” moments. Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida tried unsuccessf­ully to goad Harris into a debate over his state’s latest ahistorica­l swing against Black history. Nikki Haley has been referring to her as “President Harris,” not only implying that President Biden is a puppet leader but also serving as as a scare tactic to remind voters that Harris is a heartbeat away from the presidency. Why are Republican­s so obsessed with Harris? One would think that DeSantis and Haley, who, like their fellow Republican presidenti­al candidates, are getting steamrolle­d by Donald Trump, would be spending more time attacking the former president. Instead, they’re fixated on Harris, whom the Biden administra­tion is deploying as their rapid response person to fight Republican attacks on American history, abortion rights, and democracy.

After two years of harsh scrutiny about her role — something that has rarely dogged other vice presidents — Harris’s tenacity, passion for bedrock Democratic issues, and ability to connect with an audience is a reminder why Biden chose her as his running mate in 2020.

If the knock on Harris was that she was spending too much time in the Washington, D.C., bubble, she has flipped the script and is racking up miles on the road. That included a stop in Boston for a conversati­on with Massachuse­tts Attorney General Andrea Campbell at the NAACP’s recent national convention.

When Tennessee’s Republican-led state legislatur­e expelled two Black lawmakers, both Democrats, for protesting their state’s refusal to discuss gun reform after a mass shooting at a Nashville school in March, Harris traveled there to voice her support.

“People were inspired by what they heard. They were motivated by what they heard. It brought some sense of revival,” Justin Jones, one of the expelled — and later reinstated — state representa­tives, told CNN. “It gave us some more flames to what was already burning here.”

That same strategy worked last fall when Harris made the conservati­ve-led Supreme Court’s dismantlin­g of nearly 50 years of settled law on abortion a centerpiec­e of the 2022 midterm elections.

While others claimed that voters were more focused on the economy, the erosion of abortion access had a major impact at the ballot box. Democrats lost the House by less than predicted and held onto the Senate and even picked up a seat.

If Harris were ineffectiv­e, she wouldn’t be drawing as much — in some cases even more — ire from Republican presidenti­al candidates as Biden does.

Not that the smoke targeting Harris isn’t about her 80-year-old boss, the oldest president in American history. But concerns about Biden’s age have increased after scary recent episodes involving two high-profile senators.

Last month Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell, 81, froze at a podium during his weekly press conference at the US Capitol, unable to speak. Republican Senator John Barrasso of Wyoming eventually asked McConnell if he wanted to return to his office and helped escort him away from startled reporters.

Days later, Senator Dianne Feinstein of California,

whose physical and mental acuity has become a constant worry, seemed confused and had to be prompted several times to “say aye” on the Defense Appropriat­ions bill. Feinstein, the Senate’s oldest member at 90, spent months away from the Capitol as she battled a particular­ly nasty case of shingles.

Given Biden’s age, attention to Harris is legitimate. But Haley has turned it into something more ghoulish by predicting that Biden is “not likely” to live through a second term.

Haley, herself a woman of color, is banking that in a nation that barely wants women of color to be seen and certainly doesn’t want them heard, Harris’s proximity to the presidency upsets what many falsely consider to be the natural order of things.

Of Jamaican and South Asian descent, Harris is the first woman and woman of color to be vice president. As a first, it was never going to be easy for her, and every media-exaggerate­d blunder or staffing shake-up garnered negative traction among conservati­ves and even some Democrats.

Now her own party is embracing Harris’s role and her effectiven­ess in promoting the Biden agenda through her focus on racial justice, reproducti­ve rights, gun reform, and democracy.

Meanwhile, Haley and DeSantis are so desperate, they’re trying to provoke fights with her to help revive their fading presidenti­al prospects.

Responding to DeSantis’s debate invitation, Harris tweeted, “There is no roundtable, no lecture, no invitation we will accept to debate the undeniable fact: There were no redeeming qualities to slavery.”

She added, “Extremists attempt to divide our nation with unnecessar­y debates. But I have news for them: We will not be distracted — and we will not be deterred.”

On the road and in Washington D.C., a renewed Harris is doing what she can to make sure that won’t happen as the administra­tion and the nation careens toward the perilous waters of 2024.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? Vice President Kamala Harris with President Biden at the White House last month.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP Vice President Kamala Harris with President Biden at the White House last month.

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