Washington, July 22: She's already broken barriers, and now Kamala Harris could become the first Black woman to head a major party presidential ticket after President Joe Biden abruptly ended his reelection bid and endorsed her. Biden announced Sunday that was stepping aside amid widespread concerns about the viability of his candidacy.
Harris is the first woman, Black person or person of South Asian descent to serve as vice president. She joined the Biden ticket after a rocky and abbreviated run of her own for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. However, her nomination is hardly a sure thing. The party is split over whether Harris should ascend or there should be a quick “mini primary.” Joe Biden Endorses Kamala Harris As Democratic Party's Presidential Nominee After Dropping Out of US Presidential Race.
A former prosecutor and US senator from California, Harris will face doubters as she seeks to reassure the party she can win the presidency in November. Her first test will be at the Democratic convention in Chicago in August. Even before Biden's endorsement, Harris was widely viewed as the favourite to replace him on the ticket. Actively campaigning in recent weeks, she's had a head start over potential challengers, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro.
Harris (59) will seek to avoid the fate of Hubert Humphrey, who as vice president won the Democratic nomination in 1968 after President Lyndon Johnson declined to run for reelection amid national dissatisfaction over the Vietnam War. Humphrey lost that year to Republican Richard Nixon. She addressed the question of succession in an interview with The Associated Press during a trip to Jakarta in September 2023. Joe Biden Endorses Kamala Harris To Become Presidential Nominee After Dropping Out of US Presidential Race, Says ‘Time To Come Together and Beat Donald Trump’.
"Joe Biden is going to be fine, so that is not going to come to fruition,” she stated. “But let us also understand that every vice president — every vice president — understands that when they take the oath they must be very clear about the responsibility they may have to take over the job of being president.” “I'm no different.”
Harris was born Oct. 20, 1964, in Oakland, California, to parents who met as civil rights activists. Her parents divorced when she was young, and she was raised by her mother alongside her younger sister, Maya. She attended Howard University, a historically Black school in Washington, and joined the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority, which became a source of sisterhood and political support over the years.
After graduating, Harris returned to the San Francisco Bay Area for law school and chose a career as a prosecutor, a move that surprised her activist family. She said she believed that working for change inside the system was just as important as agitating from outside. By 2003, she was running for her first political office, taking on the longtime San Francisco district attorney.
In late 2007, while still serving as district attorney, she was knocking on doors in Iowa for then-candidate Barack Obama. After he became president, Obama endorsed her in her 2010 race for California attorney general. Once elected to statewide office, she pledged to uphold the death penalty despite her moral opposition to it. She refused to defend Proposition 8, a voter-backed initiative banning same-sex marriage. Harris also played a key role in a USD 25 billion settlement with the nation's mortgage lenders following the foreclosure crisis.
As killings of young Black men by police received more attention, Harris implemented some changes, including tracking racial data in police stops, but didn't pursue more aggressive measures such as requiring independent prosecutors to investigate police shootings.
Harris' record as a prosecutor would dog her when she launched a presidential bid in 2019, as some progressives and younger voters demanded swifter change. But during her time on the job, she also forged a fortuitous relationship with Beau Biden, Joe Biden's son who was then Delaware's attorney general. Beau Biden died of brain cancer in 2015, and his friendship with Harris figured heavily years later as his father chose Harris to be his running mate.
Harris had a rare opportunity to advance politically when Sen. Barbara Boxer, who had served more than two decades, announced she would not run again in 2016. In office, Harris quickly became part of the Democratic resistance to Trump and gained recognition for her pointed questioning of his nominees. In one memorable moment, she pressed now-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh on whether he knew any laws that gave government the power to regulate a man's body. He did not, and the line of questioning galvanized women and abortion rights activists.
A little more than two years after becoming a senator, Harris announced her campaign for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. But her campaign was marred by infighting and she failed to gain traction, ultimately dropping out before the Iowa caucuses.
Eight months later, Biden selected Harris as his running mate. As he introduced her to the nation, Biden reflected on what her nomination meant for “little Black and brown girls who so often feel overlooked and undervalued in their communities.”
“Today, just maybe, they're seeing themselves for the first time in a new way, as the stuff of presidents and vice presidents,” he said. Once in the job, Harris worked to stem migration from Central America, but her efforts did not stop the movement of people leaving their corrupt and impoverished countries to seek safety and prosperity in the US.
Harris eventually carved out a role as the administration's most outspoken advocate for reproductive rights after the US Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark case that had guaranteed abortion access nationwide.
Much of Harris' work has focused on bolstering her party's coalition of women, young people and voters of colour. And in halls of power dominated by men — both in Washington and around the world — she has remained keenly aware of her status as a political pioneer. She often repeated a line she credited to her mother: “Kamala, you may be the first to do many things, but make sure you're not the last."
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