New York, Aug 11, 2020: White House hopeful Joe Biden on August 11 named Kamala Harris, a high-profile senator from California, as his vice presidential choice, capping a months-long search for a Democratic partner to challenge President Donald Trump in November.
Biden believes the historic choice will bolster his chances of beating Donald Trump in an election year shaped by the global coronavirus pandemic and a national reckoning on race.
Harris – a former Democratic presidential rival and a barrier-breaking former prosecutor – is the daughter of immigrants from Jamaica and India, and is the first Black woman and the first Asian American to be nominated for a presidential ticket.
“I have the great honor to announce that I’ve picked @KamalaHarris — a fearless fighter for the little guy, and one of the country’s finest public servants — as my running mate,” Biden announced on Twitter.
His campaign manager, Jennifer O’Malley Dillon added: “Ready to make history, change the world, and win.”
Though Biden and Harris clashed during the Democratic presidential debates last year, she has become a strong supporter and a prominent voice on issues of racial justice in an election year convulsed by nationwide protests in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd earlier this summer.
The decision is of great consequence, not only for Democrats’ immediate political prospects but for the future of the party.
Biden, who, at 77, would be the oldest person ever elected, has pitched himself as a “transitional candidate” and a “bridge” to a new generation of leaders, fueling speculation that should he be elected, he would be a one-term-president.
The story of Harris’ parents — immigrant academics from very different parts of the world chasing their American Dream to the Bay Area — has become a key part of her message as she introduces herself to the country.
Harris regularly describes her mother, Shyamala Gopalan, as the most important influence on her life. A breast cancer researcher from Chennai who had a powerful presence despite her five-foot stature, she died of colon cancer in 2009.
Donald Harris, Kamala’s father, is a retired leftist Stanford economics professor from Jamaica who studied issues such as income inequality but was less of an impact on her life after the couple divorced when she was a child.
In selecting Harris, a 55-year-old Democratic star, he may not only be naming a partner, but a potential successor who could become the nation’s first female president.
Harris is among the most prominent Black women in American politics with appeal across the party’s ideological spectrum. She served six years as the attorney general of California before arriving in the Senate in 2016.
Though she struggled with criticism of her prosecutorial record during the primary, Harris developed strong ties to Black women, a critical Democratic constituency that the campaign hopes to mobilize in November.
Only two women have previously been nominated for the vice presidency of a major political party and neither was successful: Sarah Palin, the governor of Alaska, in 2008, and the congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro in 1984.
Angela Davis, the philosopher and activist who became a prominent figure in the Black Power movement, was twice nominated as the vice presidential nominee of the Communist Party in the 1980s.