The Guardian (USA)

Kamala Harris sidesteps question of her role to take Biden's message on the road

- Daniel Strauss in Washington

White House aides and allies stress it’s still too early to define the type of portfolio Kamala Harris will have as vice-president. They bristle at the suggestion that Harris would be confined to one project or focus on just one subject area, as some previous vice-presidents were pegged to do.

But over the last week, the former California senator has once again taken on an increasing­ly familiar mantle: top surrogate for promoting the Biden administra­tion’s agenda.

On the one hand that’s a powerful position: it puts Harris – the first female vice-president in US history and probably a strong future contender for its first female commander-in-chief – at the forefront of US politics. But on the other, it is the latest example of Harris being used on an ad hoc basis, lacking a defining mission or role.

In the days since Joe Biden signed his $1.9tn stimulus package Harris has embarked on a cross-country tour to sell the impact of the new law. She made stops in Nevada, Colorado and then Georgia last week. She is expected to make more trips in the coming days.

“I really believe that this will support our economy,” Harris said during her stop in Colorado.

The vice-president’s tour, days after an administra­tion passes a massive piece of legislatio­n into law, is not entirely unusual. It’s in part a move to assuage fears that this stimulus could follow the same fate as the $800bn rescue law in 2009. After passage of that bill, critics argued that the Obama administra­tion was not aggressive in responding to Republican attacks about the bill. At the same time, liberals have argued that law did not go far enough.

So this time, the Biden administra­tion is trying to pre-empt similar critiques about his rescue package.

Roy Neel, who served as a chief of staff to the then vice-president, Al Gore, said it was clear the Biden administra­tion wants to use Harris as a sort of “floater” – someone who isn’t consigned to one corner of the administra­tion or its initiative­s.

“They’re saying basically what the president wants her to be which is sort of a floater, to work on anything that’s important at the time,” Neel said. “Right now, selling the stimulus is one of the most important things to him.”

For Harris, though, the trip stacks on top of her undertakin­g a media campaign in West Virginia and Arizona while the stimulus bill was still making its way through Congress. But that push partially backfired on Harris and resulted in proxy sparring with Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia, one of the senators Harris ostensibly set out to win over.

Harris’s trips over the last week sug

gest that the Biden team still see her as a potent salesperso­n rather than assign her to run briefings with governors on Covid relief, as Mike Pence did when he served as vice-president to Donald Trump, or when Biden oversaw the Obama administra­tion’s recovery efforts early on.

Still, that has prompted multiple questions about Harris and how she will be involved in the Biden administra­tion. Why not run the Covid meetings right now like Pence did, officials have been asked, instead of Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York?

“We do know that she is a potent tool and it’s clear that the Biden administra­tion is more than happy to deploy her in support of its signature initiative­s so far,” said Yusef Robb, a veteran Democratic strategist. “Look, Kamala Harris is exciting, talented and can personally speak to people of color, women, parents and others who have been most affected by the pandemic.”

At the same time Harris has also been visible on the foreign policy front, a move that might prove beneficial in the future if the current vice-president ever ended up running for president and needed to highlight her experience with world leaders. She has reportedly begun regular private lunches with the secretary of state, Antony Blinken, a meeting that other presidents have usually taken themselves. She has also had one-on-one conversati­on with a number of world leaders early on in the administra­tion.

Neel said that suggests that Biden is “comfortabl­e including and relying on the vice-president to be involved in things where she doesn’t have much of a background”.

Neel added: “That is really good for her because it doesn’t pigeonhole her into any one government function like the environmen­t or healthcare or something. So he’s obviously using her everywhere it makes sense as part of the team.”

Democrats stress the

Biden administra­tion is in its earliest days and the role Harris will play is still forming.

Her rise has been extremely fast compared with previous vice-presidents. She did not finish her first term in the Senate before Biden picked her as vice-president and before that was attorney general of California. But her background as a prosecutor, which resulted in a viral moment or two in the Senate, has not been visibly utilized since she became vice-president – yet.

Harris’s future, though, depends on the success of Biden’s administra­tion. If Biden leaves office popular, Harris will be regarded as the heir apparent.

“She is pushing forward Joe’s vision for America, just like she said she would,” Robb added.

That is really good for her because it doesn’t pigeonhole her into any one government function like the environmen­t or healthcare or something

wards Americans of Asian descent, some participan­ts could not restrain themselves from stoking the flames. In his brief contributi­on to the debate, Chip Roy, a Republican congressma­n from Texas, managed not only to glorify lynching but also went on a rant about the Chinese Communist party and its “Chi-Coms” whom he blamed for the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Grace Meng, a Democratic representa­tive from New York who has sponsored federal hate crime legislatio­n specifical­ly geared to Asian Americans, responded to Roy with disbelief and disgust. “Your president, your party and your colleagues can talk about issues with any other country that you want, but you don’t have to do it by putting a bullseye on the back of Asian Americans across this country, on our grandparen­ts, on our kids,” she said.

Roy’s inflammato­ry comments were not the only sour note struck amid the grieving. Local police handled the investigat­ion into the suspected shooter in a way that also seemed to confirm Au’s sense that “no one’s coming to save us”.

After he was arrested in his SUV driving south towards Florida, where he reportedly intended to commit further killings, the accused gunman was interviewe­d by investigat­ors of Cherokee county sheriff’s office outside Atlanta. The police spokespers­on, Captain Jay

Baker, emphasized to reporters the day after the shootings that the suspect had denied any racial motive behind his actions, insisting instead that he was trying to eliminate the “temptation” of his sex addiction.

Baker then went on to describe the emotional bearing of the alleged shooter. “He was pretty much fed up and kind of at the end of his rope. Yesterday was a really bad day for him and this is what he did.”

Baker’s framing of the suspect’s mindset was widely criticised for amplifying age-old tropes and downplayin­g the racism that Asian Americans endure. Instead of referencin­g hatred and misogyny, he had chosen to highlight the suspect’s “bad day”.

“There has always been pushback to say, ‘That’s not racism’, ‘That’s not racially motivated’, ‘Asian Americans don’t get harassed because of their race’,” Choimorrow said. “All of which is absolutely not true.”

Anger soon turned to revulsion when a post on Baker’s Facebook page surfaced in which he encouraged friends to buy T-shirts with the racist logo: “Covid 19 – Imported virus from Chy-Na”. The officer has since been removed from his role as spokespers­on for the investigat­ion.

With so much animosity in the air – from the massage parlors of Atlanta to the sheriff’s office of Cherokee county and even inside Congress – it would be understand­able if the prevailing reaction of Asian Americans were one of resignatio­n and despair. It is not.

Au yet again captured the spirit. At the end of a terrible week, she applauded what she sees as the growing determinat­ion of her community to come out of the shadows, to no longer be ignored.

“What I’m hearing, is that this is going to motivate and drive and energize people to step up,” she told The 19th. “It’s a tragedy that’s happened. But let’s try at least to channel it into some momentum that prevents this from happening again.”

 ??  ?? Kamala Harris listens for questions being shouted by reporters before departing from Denver internatio­nal airport this week on a trip to sell the $1.9tn stimulus package to the American people. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
Kamala Harris listens for questions being shouted by reporters before departing from Denver internatio­nal airport this week on a trip to sell the $1.9tn stimulus package to the American people. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
 ??  ?? Kamala Harris waves as she arrives at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, before departing to Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday. Photograph: Leah Millis/Reuters
Kamala Harris waves as she arrives at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, before departing to Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday. Photograph: Leah Millis/Reuters

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