The Mercury News

Kamala Harris made Joe Biden appear like a man of yesterday, not tomorrow

- By Eugene Robinson Eugene Robinson is a Washington Post columnist.

WASHINGTON >> The biggest impact of last week’s two-night, 20-candidate Democratic extravagan­za is that a new star has emerged: Sen. Kamala Harris of California turned in one of the best debate performanc­es I’ve ever seen. She earned herself a place in the upper tier of the crowded field. Now we’ll see if she can climb all the way to the top — and stay there.

Harris’ ascent came at the expense of front-runner Joe Biden, who had such a disappoint­ing outing he can only do better next time. He still leads all comers. But he showed vulnerabil­ities.

By far the biggest question for many Democrats is: Who is the surest bet to beat Trump? The answer, according to polls thus far, is Biden. But his performanc­e Thursday night has to make never-trump voters nervous about his prospects in a general election race against President Trump.

With what seemed a preplanned assault on Biden — on his fond reminiscen­ces of white-supremacis­t Senate colleagues and his late-1970s stance against federally mandated school busing to achieve racial integratio­n — Harris accomplish­ed three important things. The former California attorney general displayed her world-class skills as a prosecutor, treating Biden like a defendant on the witness stand. She made Biden look defensive and flustered and, frankly, old. And she introduced her personal history as a young black girl in Berkeley who rode a bus to school.

Her attack on Biden wasn’t nice, but it wasn’t unfair — his stance on busing is a matter of public record. She made it clear she wasn’t accusing Biden of being a racist. But she did imply that he was a man of yesterday, not tomorrow.

It was easy to imagine her utterly demolishin­g Trump on a debate stage. You could imagine Biden doing so too, but you had to wonder.

Harris got everybody’s attention. Now begins the serious vetting — of her record, her background, her temperamen­t, her positions on the issues. She indicated during the debate that her “Medicare for All” health care plan involves eliminatin­g private health insurance, but her campaign said Friday she misunderst­ood the question. So which is it? Biden has vast experience in foreign affairs; Harris doesn’t. Can she repair the damage Trump is doing to the nation’s global standing? She denounces Trump’s immigratio­n policy. What’s hers?

If Harris’ debate triumph was a revelation, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ performanc­e was familiar. Nobody stays onmessage better than Bernie. But unlike four years ago, when he had the progressiv­e wing of the party to himself, this year he has to share it with Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, who dominated Wednesday night’s first half of the debate. Perhaps next time we’ll see how her detailed plans for addressing problems and issues compete on a debate stage with Sanders’ general call for a political “revolution.”

Pete Buttigieg created a moment when he forthright­ly took responsibi­lity for not doing more to diversify the police department of South Bend, Indiana, during his time as mayor. Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado and former housing secretary Julian Castro really helped themselves last week; New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York showed that breaking the debate rules and interrupti­ng constantly gets you noticed, not punished. And God bless Marianne Williamson, because yes, we do need love.

Bottom line: Harris won the two-night debate by a wide margin. And Biden needs to do better next time if he wants to keep his lead.

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