Will VP Harris Drawing a Line In the Sand for a Two-State Solution Hold?
Will her stepping into this topic on the world stage help bring peace to the Middle East and elevate her profile?
Behind the scenes at the COP28 Conference in Dubai, Vice President Harris has been engaged in aggressive diplomacy to try to bring about a two-state solution with a future Palestine and Israel, something currently opposed by Prime Minister Netanyahu.
She has spoken with several Middle East leaders, including Egypt’s President and the King of Jordan, at the global climate summit in Dubai over the weekend. Yesterday she gave an impassioned speech about it:
“I’ve had a number of conversations with Arab leaders here in Dubai. …
“The international community must dedicate significant resources to support short and long-term recovery in Gaza. …
“The Palestinian Authority security forces must be strengthened to eventually assume security responsibilities in Gaza. Until then, there must be security arrangements that are acceptable to Israel, the people of Gaza, the Palestinian Authority, and the international partners.
“The Palestinian authority must be revitalized, driven by the will of the Palestinian people, which will allow them to benefit from the rule of law and a transparent responsive government.”
Putting the Vice President out front is a good beginning, both for peace in the Middle East and for Joe Biden’s candidacy. And, given the stakes of the 2024 election for both America and the Middle East, this is an important time for Kamala Harris to step forward.
When John F. Kennedy ran for president in 1960, most Americans knew very little about his running mate, Texas Senator Lyndon Johnson. Moreover, they didn’t much care. Kennedy was a robust 43 years old and the odds that he’d succumb to disease or old age weren’t even considered (and the last president assassinated was McKinley in 1901, which nobody of voting age then remembered).
Therefore, outside of Texas, when JFK campaigned that year, he almost never even mentioned LBJ. Nobody really cared.
That won’t be true next year. Regardless of who the Republican nominee is, their line of attack against the Biden/Harris ticket will be simple:
“You’re voting for a man who’ll be 82 in his first year in office, which means you’re really voting for Kamala Harris to become president at some point during the next four years.”
As predictable as Republicans relying on attacks instead of highlighting their own positions and policies, that will be followed by:
“Do you know her? Do you trust her? Let me tell you all about how terrible she is, what a radical Black woman she is, the terrible things she’s done in her life and career.”
Outside of California, most Americans know virtually nothing about Kamala Harris, and the new voters who’ll be showing up in 2024 — Zoomers fresh out of school and women who’d never voted before but are now enraged by the Dobbs decision — know even less, because they weren’t paying attention during the 2020 Democratic primary debates.
If you’re old enough, you’ll recall what happened the last time a Democratic nominee failed to define himself well enough that his identity was bulletproof going into the election.
The Swift Boat Veterans for Truth got out ahead of John Kerry and defined him for the American public, leaving him to rather helplessly argue that he wasn’t a preening elitist opportunist who lied about his service in Vietnam. It didn’t work and he lost the election to George W. Bush who, ironically, is alleged to have gone AWOL during the Vietnam war.
If that doesn’t give you pause, consider this: the main advisor to the Trump 2024 campaign (he now runs Trump’s Preserve America superPAC) is Chris LaCivita, the very guy who organized the Swift Boat campaign against Kerry.
And LaCivita gets around. As Lincoln Project co-founder Reed Galen noted on Twitter:
“Did you know that @NoLabelsOrg co-founder @PatMcCroryNC and @realDonaldTrump share a top advisor? None other than Mr. Swift Boat himself, Chris LaCivita.”
The serious attacks — and distortions and half-truths — about Kamala Harris probably won’t start for another few months or maybe even well into next year, which gives the Democratic Party, the Biden/Harris campaign, and concerned activists like you and me some time to get Harris’ bio and accomplishments out and into the public eye.
And in sending her to the Middle East, the Biden administration is taking an important first step: her invisibility up to this point, I’d argue, is an actual crisis, given Biden’s age.
In fact, it’s already begun. As Nikki Haley recently said:
“If you vote for Joe Biden, you really are counting on a President Harris. Because the idea that he would make it until 86 years old [the end of his second term] is not something that I think is likely.”
Establishing a political and personal identity in the public’s mind early on is crucial to effective campaigning and to developing a campaign that can withstand both personal and political attacks.
At the same time, the administration is using the power and prestige of the vice presidency to push for a two-state solution, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed will never happen.
And the face of that now is Kamala Harris.
As Israel continues its bombing campaign, killing more civilians in Gaza, this is an important turn for the Biden administration, both diplomatically and politically, for Kamala Harris to step forward. Particularly now, given the threat a second trump administration would present to America and the world as we officially head into the campaign season.
When people believe they know somebody well, it’s hard to change their minds; when they know little about someone, it doesn’t take much to redefine that person and destroy their electoral chances.
— Everybody in America knew who George W. Bush was; his family was a dynasty, just like JFK’s, and his dad had been president.
— John McCain had been flogging his own brand for so many years people could recite his war hero “maverick” bio in their sleep.
— Barack Obama burst onto the scene but with such vigor and press attention because of his novelty as the first serious Black nominee that he was well and positively defined before Republicans could take a swipe at him.
— Biden had been around forever and ran for president three times before; he was a known quantity in 2020.
— Even Mitt Romney came from a dynastic political family and was well-known before his campaign began.
But Kamala Harris, right now, is a cipher. As VP, part of her job is to not eclipse the president, so it makes a certain amount of sense that the White House hadn’t been pushing her into the headlines, but this is not a “normal” presidency: when Reagan left office at 77 he was so far advanced in dementia that he often didn’t know where he was.
And there’s the problem: that “major” issues are generally handled by the president with the VP nowhere to be seen. Witness the NATO summit and the meetings around it. If Harris had gone, Republicans would have said she was there because Biden is losing it (it is, after all, a meeting for heads of state); without her attendance, however, it’s one more lost chance to claim a personal accomplishment.
Which leaves us with this simple test. Quick: name her top five accomplishments in either life, as VP, or both. Identify a handful of her experiences and characteristics that would make a person — particularly a young person — want to vote for her.
If you’re stumped, the Democratic Party is facing a potential catastrophe. Not to mention the triple-whammy of her being Black, Asian, and female.
Harris certainly had accomplishments in California and in the Senate, but those are now ancient history. And as VP, when you search the web for her accomplishments, most of what you find are speeches she’s given and the unusually large number of tie-breaking votes she’s cast in the Senate. And, of course, all the rightwing attacks on her that have already accumulated.
Wikipedia, which is relentlessly edited by paid rightwingers (I once walked through a boiler-room in a rightwing think tank where nearly every screen was open to Wikipedia), spends almost as much time echoing rightwing hits on her as it does mentioning her votes, travels, and speeches.
But she has had some very real and consequential successes.
President Biden famously dumped the southern border situation in Harris’ lap, and today that “crisis” has become a mere trickle of a problem. Harris played a large role in this, working with multiple Central American governments to reduce the political and economic pressures that were sending people north.
Believing that people with jobs don’t flee their countries, she met with the presidents of El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala and pressured US companies doing business in the area to step up and help, securing over $4 billion in local job-creating commitments from 47 major companies — that didn’t pull jobs away from America.
She’s met with more than 100 foreign leaders, and secured promises of hundreds of millions in aid for Central America from Ireland, Finland, Japan, and South Korea.
She worked with Microsoft to get millions of Central American homes wired for internet, and Mastercard helped over a million small businesses set up payment systems at a very low cost. As the Voice of America (mainstream media ignored the story) noted:
“Commitments by the companies include Microsoft's agreeing to expand internet access to as many as 3 million people in the region by July 2022 and Nespresso's plans to begin buying some of its coffee from El Salvador and Honduras with a minimum regional investment of $150 million…
“Chobani has agreed to bring its incubator program for local entrepreneurs to Guatemala, while Mastercard will aim to bring 5 million people in the region who currently lack banking services into the financial system and give 1 million micro and small businesses access to electronic banking…”
The result of her efforts over the past two years, combined with Biden administration changes to the way refugees and immigrants are allowed in and processed has turned the “border crisis” that Biden inherited from Trump into a rather orderly process. It’s far from perfect, but it’s now well under control.
The Washington Post published a major article about the changes at the border titled “Southern border ‘eerily quiet’ after policy shift on asylum seekers.”
But, even after noting, “The preliminary result is a nearly 70 percent drop in illegal entries since early May, according to the latest U.S. Customs and Border Protection data,” nowhere in the Post article are Harris’ substantial contributions to working on the problem mentioned. Her name doesn’t even appear in the article.
And that’s just one of several issues she’s worked on with success. Others include initiatives to deal with the abortion crisis and protect women’s private medical information in the wake of the Dobbs decision; helping get aid to universities and colleges (particularly HBCUs, 36 of which have been subject to white nationalist bomb threats); and participating in every major decision-making meeting in the White House including Biden’s decision to pull US troops out of Afghanistan.
And now, wisely in my opinion, the Biden administration has sent her to Dubai to represent the United States at COP28 but also to give a major policy speech both asserting America support of Israel and warning the Netanyahu government about possible loss of American support if they continue what appears to be indiscriminate killing of civilians.
It’s easy to understand that too much attention on Harris detracts from Biden’s accomplishments — and he’s the actual candidate for president — not to mention the fact that her approval numbers are even lower than his.
But that also argues for raising her profile, since she will be more “on the ticket” and on the minds of voters — particularly undecided and swing voters — than any vice president in our lifetimes.
Seeing that happen now at COP28 in Dubai around the red-hot issue of a two-state solution is a very good sign. And, hopefully, her stepping into this topic on the world stage will both help bring peace to the Middle East and elevate her profile.
The White House, the press corps, progressive media, and those of us who participate on social media must start talking about — and telling the stories — of Vice President Harris.
Otherwise, the Swift Boat guys will define her and tell their twisted version of her story to the American people just as surely as the sun will come up tomorrow.
And, hopefully, her new involvement can actually help the world to bring some semblance of peace and justice to the Palestinian crisis.
These are great insights Thom - and very timely. I found nothing in the major news media outlets about the border solutions VP Harris offered. Kristen Welker seems more interested in soft-balling the former prez than addressing the border crisis and Harris’ actions.
Nice job excusing away VP Harris's virtual invisibility because "Republicans would say..." She has not been of benefit to the Biden administration and is more proof of the dangers of identity politics. And my answer to your question is a resounding "no" as Genocide Joe hugs Netanyahu and then gives him the obligatory slap on the wrist, akin to Hillary Clinton telling the big banks to "cut it out." This administration has all but lost the next election with their open xenophobia and the exposing of our decades long complicity with Israel's chronic crimes against humanity. And to correct your assertion Thom Israel has already lost support due to their open aspirations towards genocide and displacement of the Palestinian people. Religious zionists will stick with Israel regardless of their war crimes, while progressives are unlikely to forgive them or Biden.