Kamala Harris selected as Biden vice-president candidate - What's Your Point?

This week's What's Your Point panel; Charles Blain, Urban Reform, Jacquie Baly, political science professor UH-Downtown, Wayne Dolcefino, media consultant, Tomaro Bell, Houston Super Neighborhood leader, and Raj Salhotra, Momentum Education, join host Greg Groogan to talk about Kamala Harris and what she brings to the Democratic ticket.
   

 SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Hours before Kamala Harris took the stage for the first time as Joe Biden's vice-presidential pick, she received a text message from a childhood classmate with photos from their school days. A pensive Harris sits on the floor, dutifully looking ahead, a child in the center of an experiment in racial integration. She was among students who took the bus from their neighborhoods to school in the more affluent hillsides of Berkeley, California."That's how it started. There's no question!" Harris, 55, texted back to Aaron Peskin, the former classmate, and now a San Francisco supervisor.
Fifty years later, she's the first Black woman and first Asian American woman named to a major party presidential ticket, joining Biden in his fight to defeat Republican President Donald Trump.

Harris's path toward the second-highest office in the United States has tracked the nation's ongoing struggle for racial equality. The start-and-stop progress and sometimes messy debate has shaped her life: an upbringing by immigrant parents, a childhood among civil rights activists, a career at the helm of a flawed criminal justice system, and her rapid ascent in Democratic politics.

Those experiences forged a politician who is unafraid to buck the political powers that be but also charts a cautious course through policy debates. She's emerged as a leader who knows the power of tough questioning and a viral moment, and also the weight of her role as a voice for women of color.

"My mother Shyamala raised my sister Maya and me to believe that it was up to us and every generation of Americans to keep on marching," Harris said Wednesday. "She'd tell us: Don't sit around and complain about things. Do something."


Her fast rise hasn't been without criticism, including on her shifting policy positions. She endured questions familiar to women in politics, particularly women of color, about her ambition. Trump labeled her "nasty" for her piercing interrogation of his nominees. Some progressive Democrats, meanwhile, view her work as a prosecutor skeptically. Her own presidential bid announced before 20,000 people in her hometown of Oakland, ended before voting began as she struggled to raise money or find a clear message.

She was a Howard University graduate with no high-powered ties when she returned to her native Bay Area for law school and took a job at the Alameda County District Attorney's office in 1990.

In 2003, she decided to run for San Francisco district attorney, challenging her former boss, Terence Hallinan. He was progressive, and Harris tacked right on the issues to run against him, pledging to be tough on crime and repair relationships with police. She also took on the cause of Black mothers who lost their children to homicide and felt Hallinan was neglecting the cases. Harris, then 39, handily won the race.

Just months into her tenure, Harris decided not to seek the death penalty against a man charged with killing a police officer. The move angered law enforcement officers and drew rebuke from U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the city's former mayor and a force in California politics.

But years later, when she ran for attorney general and needed statewide support, Harris tempered her stance on capital punishment, pledging to uphold it if elected and staying silent on ballot measures to repeal it. She appealed a 2014 decision by a federal judge calling it cruel and unusual punishment and won, keeping capital punishment on the books. Today, she wants a federal moratorium.

Observers and critics point to these episodes as evidence of Harris's penchant for staking out cautious positions that uphold the status quo. Her allies say she worked within the confines of the system and the politics of the time. As district attorney, she launched a reentry program that connected nonviolent offenders to jobs and education that became a national model.

 "I remember the first time I visited the county jail. So many young men and they were mostly Black or brown or poor," she writes in her 2019 book, "The Truths We Hold," recalling her time as a young prosecutor. "They represented a living monument to lost potential, and I wanted to tear it down.

"At the same time, she took on truancy and supported a statewide law modeled off her city initiative that threatened parents with jail time, fines and lost public benefits if their kids missed school.

Harris barely won her race for state attorney general in 2010. Soon the Black Lives Matter movement was taking hold, along with outrage over police brutality, particularly against Black youth.    Harris declined to support state legislation that would have required her office to investigate fatal police shootings. Now Harris backs such investigations. 

As Attorney General, she met then-Vice President Joe Biden's son, Beau, her counterpart in Delaware. The two worked together on a settlement with the nation's five largest mortgage lenders following the foreclosure crisis. Joe Biden said this past week that relationship was key in his decision to tap Harris as his running mate. Beau Biden died of a brain tumor in 2015.

In 2016, Trump won the presidency and Harris her U.S. Senate seat. By the next year, Trump's brief tenure had convinced Harris that her perspective, particularly as a Black woman, should be represented in the Democratic primary field, said Nathan Barankin, Harris's former chief of staff. That perspective was steeped in Harris's upbringing by two immigrant parents who came to the U.S. to pursue education. Her father, Donald Harris, came from Jamaica and her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, from India.

The couple had two daughters, Kamala Devi and Maya Lakshmi. They told them stories of being met by police with fire hoses as they marched for civil rights and against the Vietnam War and of meeting Martin Luther King Jr., Harris wrote in her book. But they split soon after Harris started school. Gopalan became the main force in their lives.  She immersed them in the Black community she and her ex-husband had embraced, though they celebrated their South Asian heritage through their names and their close ties and occasional visits with their mother's family in India.
   

CHICAGO (AP) -- False claims that Kamala Harris is not legally eligible to serve as U.S. vice president or president have been circulating in social media posts since 2019, when she first launched her Democratic primary campaign.

As a person born in the U.S., at least 35 and a resident for at least 14 years, she is eligible for the nation's highest office as prescribed in the Constitution. President Donald Trump has elevated the conspiracy theory that Harris is ineligible, citing the claim on Thursday without weighing in on its validity and then on Saturday refusing to say whether he believes the California-born senator does or doesn't meet the constitutional requirements of the office he holds.

"I have nothing to do with it. I read something about it," Trump said Saturday during a news conference. He added: "It's not something that bothers me. ... It's not something that we will be pursuing." Asked point blank if Harris is eligible, Trump replied: "I just told you. I have not got into it in great detail."

A look at the claim:

THE CLAIM: Harris is ineligible to serve as vice president or president because her mother is from India and her father is from Jamaica. Trump said Thursday that he "heard" the California senator doesn't meet the requirements, adding, "I have no if idea that's right."

THE FACTS: That's false. Harris was born on Oct. 20, 1964, in Oakland, California, according to a copy of her birth certificate, obtained by The Associated Press.
Her mother, a cancer researcher from India, and her father, an economist from Jamaica, met as graduate students at the University of California, Berkeley.
Since she was born on U.S. soil, she is considered a natural born U.S. citizen under the 14th Amendment, and she is eligible to serve as either the vice president or president, Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School, told The Associated Press on Thursday.

"Full stop, end of story, period, exclamation point," Levinson said.

There is "no serious dispute" in the legal community around the idea that someone born in the U.S. can serve as president, said Juliet Sorensen, a law professor at Northwestern University.

"The VP has the same eligibility requirements as the president," Sorensen said. "Kamala Harris, she has to be a natural-born citizen, at least 35 years old, and a resident in the United States for at least 14 years. She is. That's really the end of the inquiry."

However, Newsweek published an op-ed written by John Eastman, a conservative attorney who argues that the Constitution doesn't grant birthright citizenship. Eastman sowed doubt about Harris' eligibility based on her parents' immigration status. After receiving heavy criticism for publishing the piece, Newsweek defended its decision only to reverse course and apologize.

The false claims first started circulating on social media in 2019, during Harris' presidential campaign, and they were revived against last week, days ahead of her selection as Biden's running mate. Facebook posts falsely said she would not be eligible to take over for Biden, because her parents were both immigrants.

"I can't believe people are making this idiotic comment," Laurence Tribe, a Harvard University professor of constitutional law, told The Associated Press at the time. "She is a natural-born citizen and there is no question about her eligibility to run."

Trump was a high-profile force behind the so-called "birther movement" -- the lie that questioned whether President Barack Obama, the nation's first Black president, was eligible to serve. Only after mounting pressure during his 2016 campaign did Trump disavow the claims.