This was published 6 months ago
Kamala Harris gaining swing-state voters’ trust as Biden’s surrogate
By Akayla Gardner
Washington: US Vice President Kamala Harris is increasingly endearing herself to swing-state voters, a development that if it persists, stands to neutralise Republican attacks around President Joe Biden’s age.
Nearly half of swing-state voters, 48 per cent, say they trust Harris to fulfil the duties of the presidency if Biden were no longer able to serve, according to a Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll conducted in early May. The reading marks the highest level of confidence since the survey was first conducted in October.
In recent months, Harris – the first woman, black or Asian vice president – has held a series of high-profile events that resonated with key parts of the Democratic base. They include a historic visit to a Minnesota abortion clinic, a nod to the rollback of federal reproductive rights that has galvanised women voters, and an impassioned speech at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, a landmark of the Civil Rights era. Harris and the administration have also leant into detailing her personal journey and record in public office.
Republicans have sought to attack Biden’s fitness for a second term by casting her as unprepared to take his place. Polling shows voters are more concerned about the fitness of Biden, 81, for office than Donald Trump, four years younger at 77.
“It would be foolish to think that voters aren’t thinking a little more about who the vice president is and whether she’s capable of taking over,” said political scientist Christopher Devine, who co-authored a book about vice presidential candidates.
Still, despite voters’ uptick in confidence in Harris, she trailed Trump by 7 percentage points in a hypothetical head-to-head, wider than the 4-point advantage Trump held over Biden in the poll.
The poll showed Harris as the top choice among those considered Democratic rising stars if Biden were unable to continue his campaign. That list includes Governor Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, California Governor Gavin Newsom, Maryland Governor Wes Moore and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker.
Warming sentiment towards Harris was on display at a recent stop in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, a key swing state. During an on-stage interview with the vice president, comedian D.L. Hughley unexpectedly apologised.
“I have to say that I’m sorry,” Hughley told Harris. “I had let a media narrative co-opt my perspective, and I think that tends to happen with women and people of colour.”
Hughley, who met privately with Harris in November, explained that he was critical of her time as a prosecutor in California, where he grew up and Harris spent her early political career. But, he said, “some of the things that I have subsequently come to learn about you, not only make me proud of you, but make me be an advocate.”
Biden defeated Harris in the 2020 Democratic primary before choosing her as a running mate. Her vice presidency got off to an uneven start with Republicans pouncing on her gaffes.
Over the last year, the White House has deployed her on the offensive to counter political opponents, condemning book bans and new reproductive health restrictions. Harris frequently appears in front of audiences of colour and young voters, which polls show are among the most disillusioned blocs of the Democratic base. Last week, she went viral online when she encouraged an audience of young Asian Americans to “kick that f-- door down” in pursuit of their careers.
She has made more trips to competitive western and southern states than Biden this year, particularly North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona and Nevada. Each has a high percentage of Latino or black voters.
“She is engaging communities that have not been engaged,” federal Senator Laphonza Butler, a California Democrat, said in an interview.
Trump leads Biden 48 per cent to 44 per cent across the seven swing states, according to the poll. His lead over Biden is widest in North Carolina, Arizona and Georgia. They’re tied in Nevada.
Among possible White House aspirants, Harris led with 45 per cent of swing-state voters supporting her if Biden dropped out before November. Whitmer and Buttigieg were the next at 36 per cent, followed by Newsom at 32 per cent, Moore at 23 per cent and Pritzker at 21 per cent.
Meanwhile, if Trump were unable to continue his campaign, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who Trump beat in the GOP primary, was the top alternative at 40 per cent. Former US ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley, the runner-up to Trump in the Republican primary, was at 38 per cent.
Trump hasn’t yet chosen a running mate. Once he does, Harris will no longer be measured against “an abstraction or an ideal of what a vice president should be,” vice-presidential scholar Joel Goldstein said. “She’s going to be measured or viewed as against whoever he picks.”
Harris’ events are often shaped by closed-door conversations with individuals outside her orbit, according to a person familiar with the strategy.
Earn Your Leisure podcast hosts Rashad Bilal and Troy Millings joined Hughley, along with rapper Fat Joe and other influential men, for dinner at Harris’ residence in November, according to people familiar with the event.
The discussion, along with a gathering of young entrepreneurs of colour last May, helped spur ideas for Harris’ “Economic Opportunity” tour underway. The podcasting duo moderated the first stop in Atlanta last month.
The tour aims to reach black men, whom Trump and Republicans are courting, by emphasising resources to build wealth.
“She can connect more readily with the audience that’s most problematic for Democrats than almost anyone else can,” Cornell Belcher, a Democratic pollster, said. “I would argue that is a really smart way to use her.”
The Washington Post