By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, July 03, 2021
President Joe Biden has a problem, and her name
is Kamala Harris. The vice president has become a comic figure in today’s
Washington — a politician given to missteps and unforced errors who inspires
neither loyalty nor trust within her inner circle. She might have been Biden’s
safest pick for running mate. But now she’s a liability for both the president
and the Democratic Party.
It’s not just that Harris is unpopular. Her unique
combination of falsity and incompetence generates negative press and endangers
her dreams of succeeding Biden. For Harris, the month of June has been an
extended replay of highlights from Veep, the HBO comedy starring
Julia Louis-Dreyfus as a clueless and floundering politician on the make. Only
Harris isn’t laughing.
Her favorability among registered voters is seven points
underwater in the latest Economist/YouGov
survey. Biden’s approval, by contrast, is split even: 48 percent approve,
and 48 percent disapprove. More worrisome for Harris is her “very unfavorable”
rating. It’s at 40 percent. That’s three points higher than Biden’s number —
and just three points short of Nancy Pelosi’s.
The reason for Harris’s unpopularity is no mystery. It’s
her performance. She has a problem following through. She’s fine when working
from a script, but she stumbles whenever she must improvise. The classic
example came early in the 2020 campaign. Harris attacked Biden during a primary
debate for opposing school busing in the 1970s. The moment went viral — and
then evaporated. Harris couldn’t rebut Biden’s arguments against Medicare for
All. She couldn’t withstand Tulsi Gabbard’s criticism of her record as
California’s state attorney general. She didn’t make it past the first week of
December 2019.
Last August, when Biden asked her to join the Democratic
ticket, Harris took the Hippocratic Oath of running mates: First, do no harm.
She lived up to the pledge. She followed the Biden strategy of letting
President Donald Trump hog the stage and self-destruct. She made no great
mistakes during her debate with Vice President Mike Pence. And she barely made
a sound during the presidential transition. The biggest flap concerning Harris
was over a Vogue cover shoot that annoyed her Very Online fan
base.
It was Biden who set Harris up for a fall. By May, the
surge in illegal crossings at the southern border had become impossible to
ignore. Biden said the vice president would lead the administration’s response.
This was a gargantuan and impossible task. After all, Biden’s reversal of
Trump’s immigration policies is behind the increase in illegal immigration. And
there’s no way Harris would contradict her boss, even if she wanted to.
Harris immediately distanced herself from her assignment.
She recast her mandate as a diplomatic effort to address the “root causes” of
migration. (The root cause is simple: America is a better place to live than the
Northern Triangle of Central America.) Her evasion was transparent — and
Republicans began criticizing her for refusing to visit the border. But the
Harris team doubled down, scheduling a trip to Guatemala and Mexico in early
June. It was a disaster.
Harris meant to strike a tough tone during her visit to
Guatemala City. “Do not come,” she told potential migrants. But her message was
undercut: first by Guatemalan president Alejandro Giammattei, who blamed
Biden’s “lukewarm” rhetoric for the rise in migration, and then by NBC News
anchor Lester Holt, who asked Harris why she was several thousand miles away
from the border. A flustered Harris laughed awkwardly and tried to dodge before
blurting out, “And I haven’t been to Europe!” Louis-Dreyfus couldn’t have
delivered the line any better.
Harris’s inane reply amplified Republican charges that
she was avoiding the real issue. By the time she returned from her trip, it was
obvious that Harris would visit the border sooner rather than later. The
question was when. On June 25, less than a week before Trump was scheduled to
visit Texas, Harris hurriedly went to El Paso. The Democratic bastion is far
from the Rio Grande valley that has been the busiest site of illegal activity.
But Harris managed to get through her day trip without incident. The fallout
didn’t arrive until later.
The voyage to El Paso illustrated another Harris
vulnerability: She’s a terrible manager. Leaks and infighting bedeviled her
short-lived presidential campaign. Working for her is hazardous to your health.
Or at least that’s what an anonymous source told Politico on June 30. The blockbuster
story, carrying three bylines and based on interviews with 22 “current and
former vice-presidential aides, administration officials, and associates of
Harris and Biden,” left no doubt that Harris runs a dysfunctional operation.
“It’s not a place where people feel supported but a place where people feel
treated like s—,” said a “person with direct knowledge of how Harris’s office
is run.” Imagine what they say on the office Slack channel.
Biden adviser Anita Dunn told Politico that
the situation was “not anywhere near what you are describing.” Perhaps it’s
worse. One of Harris’s former Senate aides said, “The boss’s expectations won’t
always be predictable.” Not exactly what you want in a leader. Politico says
Harris “excels when those around her project calm and order, creating a sense
of confidence and certainty.” Unfortunately, confidence and certainty are
precisely those qualities that go missing in the ad hoc, improvisational,
contingent, and situational world of global politics.
More interviews and stories like these, and Harris will
soon be living the politician’s worst nightmare: becoming a punchline. A cynic
might say that Biden purposely handed Harris the toughest assignments to
redirect negative public sentiment away from the Oval Office and to displace
the frustrations and embarrassments he experienced during eight years as Barack
Obama’s vice president. Democratic strategists worry that Harris exhibits none
of Biden’s strengths, such as they are, while shouldering all his weaknesses.
That doesn’t bode well if Biden opts not to run in 2024.
Then again, in the third season of Veep, the
fictional president steps down. Louis-Dreyfus’s character becomes president.
Think Harris is funny now? The joke might be on us.
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