This was published 1 year ago
Here is why Kamala Harris is now the favourite to replace Biden
Washington: With Joe Biden quitting the presidential race, Vice President Kamala Harris is by far the best positioned to replace him.
Harris has a head start over several of the most discussed Democratic alternatives like California Governor Gavin Newsom and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. She’s already been on a winning presidential ticket with Biden, has years of goodwill banked with core party constituencies and would most likely control a huge fund amassed by the Biden re-election campaign.
Here’s a closer look at her prospects:
She’s Biden’s most natural endorsement
The president easily locked up the Democratic nomination and party rules prevent him from simply transferring the delegates he amassed during next month’s Democratic National Convention, but a number of delegates have already suggested they’d be loyal to Harris.
Biden picking Harris limits potential chaos and avoids floor fights that do lasting damage to whoever emerges to take on Republican Donald Trump.
“Harris makes the most sense to carry on the Biden legacy,” said Andrew Feldman, a Democratic strategist who works closely with various state parties.
Feldman added that the Biden administration’s agenda “has been tremendously popular in terms of the issues that they’ve championed” and that the president and Harris have “been doing that in partnership”.
Antjuan Seawright, a South Carolina-based Democratic strategist, noted that voters four years ago put 78-year-old Biden in the Oval Office knowing Harris was next in line, and that Biden warded off primary challengers this year at age 81 with Democratic voters knowing Harris remained his second-in-command.
“Democrats have voted for Joe Biden with Kamala Harris,” Seawright said.
Challenging Harris as Biden’s alternative is risky
Harris is the first woman to serve as vice president as well as the first black woman and person of South Asian descent. African Americans are the Democrats’ largest and most loyal bloc of supporters.
Bypassing a historic No.2 for anyone else – even a popular alternative from a key swing state – would already be difficult. Being seen as leading the charge against someone who broke gender and racial barriers could forever mark the challenger as disloyal in future Democratic primaries.
Glynda Carr, who leads the Higher Heights political action committee that supports black female candidates across the country, said that public suggestions that Harris could be bypassed for another top Democrat shows “just how much black women are often times overlooked”.
“You want black women to organise our houses, our blocks, our churches, our sororities?” Carr asked. “Then we’ve got to stand by our leadership.”
Democratic Representative Jasmine Crockett of Texas said it was “impossible to understate” what it means for black women to see Harris hold national office.
Democrats with national ambitions may not want a rushed campaign
Since Biden’s disastrous debate, Democrats have mentioned a parade of top alternatives who could run in the president’s place. In addition to Whitmer and Newsom, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro and Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker have been the subject of rumours.
But, in dozens of interviews, Democratic operatives, pollsters and elected officials report that there has not been the kind of furious political jockeying for support for someone other than Harris at the convention that would be necessary now that Biden has stepped aide.
For instance, Democratic fundraising bundler Barry Goodman, a Michigan attorney who was a finance co-chairman for both of Whitmer’s statewide campaigns, said he did not know of any coordinated effort on the governor’s part to rally support.
Harris will have money to start
Further possibly helping to smooth a switch from Biden to Harris is campaign finances. The vice president, as his official running mate, can access the $US91 million cash on hand the president’s campaign has raised — which grows to $US240 million when including allied Democratic organisations — in ways Democratic alternatives likely can’t.
For his part, Trump has already been attempting to energise donors with the idea that Democrats could swap out Biden for Harris. The former president sent fundraising emails titled “Biden’s dropping out” and “President Kamala Harris?”
Her legal background might resonate more than it once did
At 59, the vice president is 22 years Biden’s junior. A former prosecutor, she can deliver a withering attack in a debate — as Biden himself once faced during the 2020 Democratic presidential primary when Harris tore into him over his onetime opposition to school busing as a means of desegregation.
The vice president’s legal background might also hew more closely to the ideals of today’s Democratic Party, which has largely moved to the centre on criminal justice and law-and-order messaging in recent years after nationwide protests against racial injustice in 2020 helped energise the “defund the police” movement.
Biden has seen his approval rating fall sharply among black Americans, a trend Harris would hope to reverse before November. Still, Biden has long struggled with low approval ratings among Americans more generally and the vice president doesn’t fare much better.
About 39 per cent of US adults have a very or somewhat favourable opinion of the vice president, which is in line with Biden’s 40 per cent favorability.
AP