The Mercury News

Harris making history again — as GOP’s prime campaign target

- By Mark Z. Barabak Mark Z. Barabak is a Los Angeles Times columnist. ©2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

In North Carolina, Senate hopeful Pat McCrory vows to take on the “Harris-Biden administra­tion” and thwart the vice president and Democrats “who want to radically change America for years to come.”

In Alabama, Jessica Taylor paints a dystopian portrait of “Kamala’s America” — conspicuou­sly mispronoun­cing Harris’ first name — and promises to be “Kamala’s worst nightmare” if she joins the Senate.

Harris ran a lousy presidenti­al campaign. As vice president, she’s put her ambitions in a blind trust, assuming the traditiona­l role of understudy.

But to hear Republican­s tell it, it’s not Biden but the former California senator who has her Chuck Taylors planted firmly in the Oval Office.

Harris is, of course, a historymak­ing figure: the first female, first Black and first Asian American vice president. She also comes from California.

Never mind that Harris, a former prosecutor, was deemed too centrist for the taste of many Democratic primary voters. To much of the country, that Left Coast pedigree suggests kooky liberal.

Biden, for his part, is precedent-setting in his own way. At age 78, he is the oldest president ever to hold office, making his health and well-being a constant source of rumor and speculatio­n, with Harris the proverbial heartbeat away from taking over.

All those factors combine to make her a groundbrea­ker in yet another way: the vice president destined to launch 1,000 negative campaign ads. Most of her predecesso­rs could have entered the witness protection program with few knowing or caring.

Ever since he emerged last year as the Democratic nominee, Biden has presented Republican­s with a problem: People tend not to hate him in the visceral way they did Barack Obama, Bill Clinton or his wife, Hillary. For many Republican­s, the worst they have to say is that Biden is “a doddering albeit nice old man who is not necessaril­y in charge of his own administra­tion,” as one veteran GOP pollster put it.

Biden’s approval rating, which hovers in the low to mid-50s, doesn’t sparkle. But it’s quite decent given the country’s deep and persistent polarizati­on; President Trump never once hit 50% approval in any methodolog­ically sound poll.

Since it’s hard to demonize Biden, Republican­s have tried another tack: diminishin­g the president. They suggest Biden is a mere puppet with other, more liberal Democrats pulling the strings. Enter Harris.

Voters see her more negatively than positively, according to polls. Part of that is the nature of the vice presidency. The job, which is inherently subservien­t, can’t help but shrink whoever occupies the office.

Part of it is a concentrat­ed Republican effort to paint Harris as the true power in the administra­tion and hold her personally responsibl­e for its “failed” immigratio­n policy — one of the most thankless and knottiest assignment­s Biden has handed the vice president. Some animosity obviously stems from the fact Harris is a woman and, in particular, a woman of color.

“It’s unfortunat­ely no surprise that her qualificat­ions continue to be questioned,” said Amanda Hunter, executive director of the Barbara Lee Family Foundation, an organizati­on that seeks to boost the number of women in elected office. Repeated studies have shown that women, and especially women of color, are judged more severely than their male counterpar­ts.

In Harris’ case, Hunter said, it’s even easier “to drive a wedge or question the qualificat­ions of someone who doesn’t look like the people who have come before (her) for hundreds of years. Joe Biden not only had a long, establishe­d career in Washington, he looks like most” of the country’s past presidents.

The contrast between Biden and Harris is stark. (And part of what made her an appealing choice to help balance the Democratic ticket.)

Biden is not only a White male but one whose qualities — love of his close-knit family, a workingcla­ss background — are seen by many voters as “‘average’ American,” said Keneshia Grant, a Howard University political scientist who has written a book on Black voters and the Democratic Party. “It’s difficult to argue against that in an ad.”

So it’s little wonder that Jessica Taylor, the Alabama Senate hopeful, virtually ignores Biden and puts Harris at the center of a spot that sounds as if it were laboratory-tested to start conservati­ve hormones raging, as it mashes up “the woke police” cancel culture, the “fake” news media, voter fraud, critical race theory and welfare cheats.

(“God, grace and grit” is the tagline of the ad, which describes Taylor as a product of rural Alabama raised to love “God, guns, family, fishing and fourwheeli­ng.” Clearly she believes alliterati­on is a major qualificat­ion for elected office.)

There is one consolatio­n in the early and unusual barrage of attack ads the vice president faces. If, as widely expected, Harris seeks the White House again in 2024, or thereafter, she’ll be fully aware of what’s in store.

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