OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
Why Kamala Harris Matters So Much in 2024
April 25,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/25/opinion/kamala-harris-joe-biden-2024-reelection.html
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
A few weeks
ago, one of France’s most famous public intellectuals, Bernard-Henri Lévy, gave
an interview to The Times on his new documentary, “Slava Ukraini,” and he said
something that helped me understand why, as I approach my 70th birthday, I
still want to be a journalist.
Asked why,
at age 74, he dodged rockets in Ukraine to bring home the savagery of the
Russian invasion, Lévy said, “In Ukraine, I had the feeling for the first time
that the world I knew, the world in which I grew up, the world that I want to
leave to my children and grandchildren, might collapse.”
I have that
exact same fear.
Which is
why the focus of my columns these days has been very tight. There are three
things that absolutely cannot be allowed to happen: Israel cannot be allowed to
turn into an autocracy like Viktor Orban’s Hungary; Ukraine cannot be allowed
to fall to Vladimir Putin; and Donald Trump cannot be allowed to occupy the
White House ever again.
If all
three were to happen, the world that I want to leave my children and
grandchildren could completely collapse.
Israel, the
only functioning pluralistic democracy in the Middle East, tempered by the rule
of law, albeit imperfect, would be lost.
The
European Union — the United States of Europe, the world’s other great
multiethnic center of free markets, free people and human rights — would be at
Putin’s mercy.
And the
United States of America, with a vengeful Trump back in the White House,
effectively pardoned for his many attacks on our democratic institutions and
his assault on the integrity of our elections, would never be the same. Trump
would be unchained — an utterly chilling thought.
It’s
through this lens that I want to talk about Joe Biden’s announcement on Tuesday
that he is running for re-election, joined again by Kamala Harris. Biden’s
ability to finish his current term and successfully navigate another one is
critical to all three scenarios mentioned above. Which is why, now that Biden
has declared that he is running, he absolutely has to win.
But while
you may think the 2024 election is very likely going to be a rerun of 2020,
that is not the case for the Democrats. This time, Biden’s running mate will
really matter.
We are
always told that, in the end, people vote for the candidate for president, not
for vice president. But because Biden would be 86 at the end of a second term —
and therefore the chance of his health failing is not small — people will be
asked to vote as much for his vice president as for him, maybe more than in any
other election in American history.
The most
recent FiveThirtyEight average of all the Biden-Harris approval polls found
that 51.9 percent of Americans disapprove of Harris’s job performance and 40
percent approve, about the same numbers as Biden’s.
Let me be
clear: I voted for Joe Biden, and I do not want my money back. He is a good
man, and he has been a good president, better than the polls give him credit
for. The Western alliance that he put together, and has held together, to
counter the Russian invasion of Ukraine has been a master class in alliance
management and defending the democratic order in Europe. Ask Putin.
The way
Biden has told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he is not fooled
by — and will not be indifferent to — Netanyahu’s judicial coup d’état
masquerading as a “judicial reform” has been a tremendous source of
encouragement for the hundreds of thousands of Israelis who have taken to the
streets to defend their democracy.
And on the
domestic issues I care about most — rebuilding America’s infrastructure,
ensuring American leadership in the manufacture of the most advanced microchips
that will power the age of artificial intelligence, and incentivizing market
forces to deliver the huge scale of clean energy we need to mitigate the worst
impacts of climate change — Biden has delivered beyond my highest hopes.
Joe Biden
would be my candidate, no matter what his age, as long he was physically and
mentally able, because I see no other Democrat with his blend of political
skills, his core belief in the necessity and possibility of national unity, his
foreign policy savvy and his ability to disagree with Trump’s supporters
without trying to humiliating them. He authentically wants to get the poison
out of our political system.
But … I am
keenly aware that plenty of Americans don’t share my views. I realize that the
roughly 30 percent of Republicans who are Trump devotees are most likely beyond
reach — and nothing Biden can say will bring them around. However, they will
not decide the next election.
As Axios
reported on April 17, Gallup polling in March “found that a record 49 percent
of Americans see themselves as politically independent — the same as the two
major parties put together.”
This means
that there are many moderate, principled conservatives and independents who
will not, or prefer not to, vote for Trump again. Just enough of them
demonstrated as much in the 2022 midterms to prevent virtually all of the major
Trump election deniers running for state and national office from gaining
power. Their votes helped to save our democracy.
If the 2024
race comes down to Biden vs. Trump again, we are going to need those
independents and moderate Republicans to show up again. But this time around,
because of his age and the possibility that he might not be able to finish a
second term, Biden’s vice president will be much more consequential in their
minds.
It’s no secret
that Vice President Harris has not elevated her stature in the last two-plus
years. I don’t know what the problem is — whether she was dealt an impossible
set of issues to deal with, or is in over her head, or is contending with a mix
of sexism and racism as the first woman of color to serve as vice president.
All I know is that doubts among voters about her abilities to serve as
president, which were significant enough for her to quit as a presidential
candidate even before the Iowa caucuses in 2020, have not gone away.
Given the
stakes, Biden needs to make the case to his party — and, more important, to
independents and moderate Republicans — why Harris is the best choice to
succeed him, should he not be able to complete his term. He cannot ignore this
issue, because that question will be on the minds of many voters come election
time.
At the same
time, Harris has to make the case for herself, ideally by showing more
forcefully what she can do. One thing Biden might consider is putting Harris in
charge of ensuring that America’s transition to the age of artificial
intelligence works to strengthen communities and the middle class. It is a big
theme that could take her all over the country.
I wrote a
column more than two years ago suggesting that Biden make Harris “his de facto
secretary of rural development, in charge of closing the opportunity gap, the
connectivity gap, the learning gap, the start-up gap — and the anger and
alienation gap — between rural America and the rest of the country.” It would
have been a substantive challenge and would have enabled her and the
administration to build bridges to rural Republicans. Never happened.
I am
terrified of going into this election with a Democratic ticket that gives
moderate Republicans and independents — who are desperate for an alternative to
Trump — any excuse to gravitate back to him.
And beware.
Trump is no fool. If he’s the G.O.P. nominee, I can easily see him asking a
more moderate Republican woman, like Nikki Haley, to be his running mate,
knowing that her presence on the ticket could be an incentive that gives at
least some of those Republicans and independents who are down on Trump an
excuse to plug their noses and vote for him another time.
Make no
mistake, the vice presidency is really going to matter in an election that is
really going to matter. Because I don’t want Biden to win this election by 50.1
percent. I want it to be a landslide rejection of Trumpism and the politics of
division. I want it to send a loud message around the world — to the Putins and
the Netanyahus and the Orbans — that there are way more of us Americans on the
center-right and the center-left, way more people who are ready to work
together for the common good, than there are haters and dividers.
That’s an
America worth handing over to our children and grandchildren.
Thomas L.
Friedman is the foreign affairs Op-Ed columnist. He joined the paper in 1981,
and has won three Pulitzer Prizes. He is the author of seven books, including
“From Beirut to Jerusalem,” which won the National Book Award. @tomfriedman
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