Los Angeles Times

Harris’ path runs through S. Carolina

Senator’s presidenti­al bid puts a focus on the key early state with complicate­d politics.

- By Evan Halper and Mark Z. Barabak Halper reported from Columbia and Barabak from San Francisco.

COLUMBIA, S.C. — For Kamala Harris, the road to the White House began amid the sequins, satin gowns and crystal chandelier­s of a ballroom in the capital city of South Carolina.

The California senator made her debut on the presidenti­al campaign trail Friday night before 3,700 partygoers at the city’s annual Pink Ice Gala.

It was no coincidenc­e Harris chose this state to make her initial appearance. Nor was the locale an accident: the annual bash thrown by Alpha Kappa Alpha, the nation’s first sorority founded by African Americans, which Harris pledged as a student at Howard University.

Few states are being as closely studied by her campaign as South Carolina, which has a crucial early place on the 2020 calendar.

South Carolina played a vital role propelling Barack Obama to the White House in 2008, boosting him past Hillary Clinton. The state and its large African American population hold similar promise for Harris, whose parents were immigrants: her father from Jamaica, her mother from India.

South Carolina may be a conservati­ve stronghold. But the Democratic primary electorate is mostly black, serving as a political bellwether for much of the South, where Harris’ stature as the first viable black female presidenti­al candidate could position her uniquely well. The party is looking for fresh faces, and the turnout of black women has historical­ly been among the highest of any voter group.

Harris’ strategy for winning the Democratic nomination depends heavily on a big win in South Carolina — which is the fourth state to vote, after Iowa, New Hampshire and Nevada. Victory in the state’s primary at the end of February 2020 could serve as a springboar­d into the coast-to-coast balloting that takes place three days later, including in California.

“When we look at where we are at this moment in the history of this country, I think our founders gave us the right charge,” the senator said of the 111-year-old sorority’s community service mission. “We are all here because we stand on other people’s shoulders. My mother taught us long ago, she would say to me, ‘Kamala, you may be the first to do many things, but make sure you are not the last.’ ”

Harris, 54, spoke for just three minutes and exited the stage to a swarm of fans.

“Anybody who brings a different perspectiv­e to our world is worth being excited about,” said Marchele Garrett, 45, a diversity officer. “She is female. She is biracial. She is a dynamic civic leader. But she is also an amazing community service advocate. All that into one, versus what we currently have right now, is amazing.”

But for every admirer like Garrett, there were some in the crowd who said they want to hear more from Harris, signaling the challenge ahead. Voters here take pride in intensely scrutinizi­ng candidates, and alliances can shift quickly.

“Sen. Harris has an advantage, but it would be a mistake for her campaign to assume that advantage will take her across the finish line,” said Gilda Cobb-Hunter, a member of the Democratic National Committee and a state representa­tive from Orangeburg, where more than three-quarters of residents are black. “She will need to work just like all the other candidates.”

African Americans are among the most motivated voters in the country when it comes to ejecting President Trump from office, and influentia­l South Carolina Democrats said repeatedly that electabili­ty will eclipse identity politics when primary ballots are cast.

“Someone’s mama could be running and people wouldn’t vote for her if they didn’t think she could beat Donald Trump,” said Todd Rutherford, who leads Democrats in the state House of Representa­tives.

It didn’t take long for Harris to experience the brutal nature of campaigns here in a state long known for intense, sometimes vicious, politics. Soon after she used a Martin Luther King Jr. Day appearance on ABC’s “Good Morning America” to announce her candidacy, a former head of the state’s black legislativ­e caucus issued a statement calling Harris disrespect­ful.

“Most people in South Carolina who take pride in that day found it offensive that she chose it to make her announceme­nt,” said the lawmaker, Rep. John King. Harris allies said his characteri­zation of voter reaction to the launch was off base.

Despite his criticism, King said he may ultimately endorse the senator, but he argued she has a steeper hill to climb with African Americans than her campaign may realize. He pointed to his activist niece at historical­ly black Spelman College in Atlanta, who vowed Harris won’t get her vote because of the rate at which she incarcerat­ed black men as chief prosecutor in San Francisco and as California’s attorney general.

Harris strategist­s said they don’t fret over the possibilit­y voters here won’t consider her liberal enough or black enough to support. Ian Sams, a spokesman, defended Harris’ criminal justice record and said she looked forward to discussing it with voters.

Most South Carolina politician­s and Democratic activists are officially neutral at this early stage, but many also have relationsh­ips with two other potential candidates expected to perform well here, should they run: Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, who is African American, and former Vice President Joe Biden, who has long-standing relations with state party leaders.

One early phone call many top-tier Democrats make when considerin­g a presidenti­al run is to Majority Whip James E. Clyburn, the most prominent Democrat in South Carolina.

Clyburn said in an interview that he tells them all that the state, with its inexpensiv­e media markets and cultural and economic diversity, is a great laboratory for testing ideas with different subsets of voters.

But where candidates often misstep, he said, is in assuming there is a formula to winning the black vote, which is too big and diverse to neatly categorize.

“My background and my experience­s are different than even my own wife’s,” Clyburn said. “You have to be yourself and get to know who these voters are. People sometimes try to do it the other way, and it ends up being a big downer for them.”

Harris’ strategy could be complicate­d if Biden enters the race. He has deep ties to the state, and conversati­ons with activists suggest those bonds haven’t frayed.

“The question people will have is whether [Harris] can win Pennsylvan­ia, Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin in a race with Trump,” said Dick Harpootlia­n, a state senator and former state Democratic Party chairman.

“There’s a sense of pragmatism I have not seen within the Democratic electorate in a long time,” he said. “Their No. 1 goal is not to elect a black, not to elect a woman, not to elect a specific demographi­c.… There’s this desperatio­n to win.”

 ?? Evan Halper Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA Sen. Kamala Harris talks to reporters at a gala in Columbia, S.C., where she debuted her campaign for the Democratic nomination Friday night.
Evan Halper Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA Sen. Kamala Harris talks to reporters at a gala in Columbia, S.C., where she debuted her campaign for the Democratic nomination Friday night.

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