Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

What about Kamala?

- Susan Estrich’s column is distribute­d by the Creators Syndicate.

By any convention­al measure, President Joe Biden has won the right to seek a second term in office. Compared to his predecesso­rs, the midterm election was a triumph and the trip to the G20 a victory lap. Add that to the solid accomplish­ments in Congress, especially on climate change, and the expected passage of marriage equality legislatio­n, and you might even conclude that the president, despite lagging popularity ratings, is on a roll.

To state the obvious, the only reason Biden wouldn’t seek reelection is his age. He’s old, and in four years, he’ll be even older. Does it matter?

How much?

It is one of the great frustratio­ns of many a presidenti­al campaign that very few people vote for vice president. They vote the top of the ticket, and trying to convince them to do otherwise is usually a sign of a campaign in trouble.

But in this case, because his age is the issue, thinking about a second Biden term means thinking about who would succeed him should he be unable to complete that term.

Kamala Harris numbers are, at this point in time, worse than her boss’s — at least according to RealClearP­olitics and the Los Angeles Times, which found his approval-disapprova­l rating to be six points more favorable than hers. The interestin­g question is why.

One answer is that Harris was given the most impossible issue on the agenda, which is immigratio­n, and her numbers started heading south with that initial assignment and never recovered.

Another piece of the puzzle is the nature of the vice presidency, which, despite various feints at functional­ity, is a somewhat soulless sinecure, even when it involves, as Harris’ has, important tie-breaking votes.

“She hasn’t done anything,” more than one person has told me, in trying to explain away her lopsided numbers (54% unfavorabl­e versus 40% favorable).

Of course, she does things every day. I have no doubt her schedule is full of meetings and appearance­s, speeches and fundraisin­g. It’s just that so long as they’re going according to plan, and she’s not making a fool of herself in the way some prior incumbents of her office occasional­ly did, it’s just not news. It isn’t really nothing, but it translates that way and leaves her ratings where they are.

Which raises that other question: How much of Harris’ unfavorabl­e rating owes to issues of identity, of race and gender, understand­ing that her white male predecesso­rs all started out higher than she is, and how much to the increasing partisansh­ip in this country?

This much is clear. Strengthen­ing Harris’ numbers is in the administra­tion’s best political interest. The more comfortabl­e people are with Vice President Kamala Harris, the more comfortabl­e they will be supporting a second term for the president. Improving her standing improves his. Convincing people that she is indeed ready goes a long way to convincing them that he deserves four more years.

That means giving Harris the kind of central role that will show Americans that Biden has the same deep-seated confidence in her that he will be asking us to have in her. It means important moments, important assignment­s, participat­ing in critical meetings and decisions, and forging successes that can be shared and built upon by the Biden-Harris administra­tion. For now and for four more years.

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