By Rich
Lowry
Tuesday,
August 29, 2023
Kamala Harris is
one of the most prominent people in the United States, with the potential that
at any moment she could inherit some of the most fearsome powers on earth, but
no one is supposed to notice.
Republicans
are deemed unhealthily fixated on Harris for saying that a vote for the increasingly
rickety President
Joe Biden is a vote to make Kamala Harris president.
“Why are
Republicans so obsessed with Harris?” asked a Boston Globe columnist.
Jemele
Hill, the former ESPN journalist currently with the Atlantic,
rapped Nikki Haley in lurid terms for warning of a President Harris: “So part
of the reason racism is such a terrible sickness in this country is because
politicians like this know they can rally a certain base with the fear of OH MY
GOD A BLACK WOMAN MIGHT BE PRESIDENT IF YOU DON’T VOTE FOR ME.”
Hill
then connected Haley’s sentiment with racist violence. Q.E.D.
It is
simply a fact that, should Joe Biden win a second term, Kamala Harris has the
greatest chance to become president of any sitting vice president since Harry
Truman.
The
Missourian, who was targeted by Republicans in the 1944 campaign, ascended to
the presidency months into Franklin Roosevelt’s fourth term.
There is
no reason, thank goodness, to believe that Biden’s health is as poor as FDR’s
near the end. Between his bouts of rambling near-incoherence, rickety gait, and
cadaver-like beach physique, though, Biden is not convincing anyone that he has
a youthful vigor that belies his years.
At a
time of deep political division, Biden unites Americans in a common view of his
complete unsuitability for a second term. An Associated Press/NORC poll found
that 77 percent of voters think he’s too old to serve again, including 69
percent of Democrats. They are being driven to this conclusion by the unadorned
evidence of Biden’s disturbingly uneven performance.
Of
course, this is why Kamala Harris looms so large. Joe Biden thinks, should
something happen to him, that Harris should be his successor. He has put her in
this position as a conscious choice, one of the most important decisions a
candidate for president can make. Why shouldn’t this judgment, and her
potential role, be fodder for debate?
It’s not
as though Harris is a bystander. As a New York Times headline
had it a couple of weeks ago, “Kamala Harris Takes on a Forceful New Role in
the 2024 Campaign.”
Anyone
who thinks Harris is getting unprecedentedly hostile treatment because she’s a
history-making minority woman has clearly never heard of Dan Quayle or Dick
Cheney, punching-bag veeps who were very unhistoric white males. Quayle was
relentlessly and unfairly pilloried during George H. W. Bush’s presidency,
while Cheney was made out to be the evil genius of the George W. Bush administration.
It’s no
wonder that Harris, an off-puttingly poor political performer who is a
stereotypical identity-politics-obsessed California progressive, should be a
political target. She has managed to be both undistinguished on the one hand
and widely disliked on the other. In late June, an NBC News poll had her
positive rating at 32 and negative rating at 49, clocking in at the lowest
ratings for a vice president in the history of the poll.
Usually,
someone has her kind of rock-bottom numbers after being associated with a
deeply unpopular new initiative or a major scandal. But the only baggage Vice
President Harris has is her own political persona.
Her
unpopularity itself would, in the ordinary course of things, make her a focus
of the opposition. That she’s No. 2 to an already-unsteady president who wants
people to believe he will serve out his second term until age 86 is even more
grist for the mill.
Democrats
seek to build a defensive ring around the vice president based on accusations
of racism and sexism. It won’t work. Everyone knows President Harris is a real
possibility, and the fact that she’s next in line will be an inevitable part of
the 2024 debate.
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