The Case for Kamala Harris
The naysayers have their points.
It would be unprecedented for Joe Biden to step aside this late in the gameâand risky to do so, particularly given the political weaknesses of Kamala Harris, his most obvious potential successor. Isnât the threat of Donald Trumpâwhose movement openly seeks to usher in a âsecond American Revolution,â which may or may not remain âbloodlessââtoo great to take such a gamble?
But to highlight the scale of that antidemocratic threat, as Biden allies have done in recent days, also underscores the inadequacy of our current bulwark against it: a senescent 81-year-old who boasts of being the only Democrat to have ever defeated Donald Trump, but now may be the only one who would actually lose to him, as evidenced by the fact that Trump and his allies appear to want Biden on the ballot in November.
âWe have to rip the band aid off,â as former Ohio Representative Tim Ryan put it Tuesday, as buzz around a Harris candidacy began to grow. âToo much is at stake.â Harris has âsignificantly grown into her job, she will destroy Trump in debate, highlight choice issue, energize our base, bring back young voters and give us generational change,â Ryan continued. âItâs time!â
Heâs right.
Harris has struggled to find her footing as vice presidentâpartly because of racism and sexism, partly because of her own political flaws. And while those factors arenât going anywhere, they are outweighed by the need for the kind of campaign reset only a younger, more dynamic candidate can provide. And it seemed clearâin an interview with CNN after last weekâs disastrous debateâthat Harris can far more effectively articulate the administrationâs successes and the existential threat of Trumpism right now than the current party standard bearer sheâs running with.
âThe job is to rouse the country out of an alternative universe in which the Trump presidency was actually not that bad,â as Lydia Polgreen argued in the New York Times last week. âI think she can make that case better than almost anyone else in the Democratic Party.â
Biden was already languishing in the polls when he took the debate stage against Trump last week. But his excruciating performance has made matters worse: He not only appears to be losing in the swing states he needs to hold the presidencyâhe may be falling behind in states like New Hampshire, Virginia, and New Mexico that had been seen as safe, raising the prospect of an electoral rout in November. âEveryone is freaking the fuck out,â as a White House official told Axios.
Not all surveys are quite as dire: a CBS News poll released Wednesday found Trump growing his national lead to about three points in battlegrounds and two points nationally, which is unsettling, but possible to overcome. Can he overcome it, though? Biden has given little cause for optimism: He has had uneven outreach to worried Democrats, his closest staff has further insulated him from âbedwettingâ skeptics, and he so far hasnât ventured out of his choreographed confines to address the public. âItâs easy to settle this right now,â CNNâs Jake Tapper, who moderated last weekâs debate, said Tuesday, suggesting a live press conference could help the campaign put the escalating fears to rest. âItâs not a crazy thing to expect the president to do.â
That he hasnât yet, and perhaps wonât, speaks volumes about the limits of his candidacy: A CNN poll found that a full 75 percent of voters believe Democrats would stand a better chance of beating Trump with someone other than Biden at the top of the ticket. And while Harris and others on Democratsâ deep roster of potential successors also seem to trail Trump right now, they are polling at least even with Bidenâand in some surveys better than himâwithout the attention, resources, and support that a campaign centered around them would afford. With the party unified around them, their prospects could improveâespecially as it would allow them to refocus the race on Trumpâs corruption, authoritarianism, and his own advancing years and declining coherence.
Itâs unclear if Harris is the strongest candidate on the Democratsâ bench, but she is likely the best option to avoid what the New Yorkerâs Jay Caspian Kang recently describedâin a piece arguing against replacing Bidenâas the âchaos of the unknown.â She could inherit not only the campaignâs current war chestâsomething apparently unavailable to other alternatives like Gretchen Whitmer or Wes Mooreâbut also a sense of continuity. She could enjoy some of the trappings of incumbency, without being saddled with the unique vulnerabilities of this particular incumbent. âThe more people understand the physics of the nomination fight, the stronger her candidacy becomes,â as Jamal Simmons, her former communications director, told Politico, which, on Wednesday, noted the âvibe shiftâ around Harris. The Drudge Report went even further: âItâs Her Party Now,â was splashed atop the home page.