CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JULY 9, 2021 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“ARE
LONGTIME ALLIES NEWSOM AND HARRIS DESTINED TO CLASH?”
Vice
President Kamala Harris took a lot of heat for her performance in her first
foreign trip as the nation’s No. 2 official, some bloggers calling her
excursion into Latin America “a continuation of her failure theater.”
That
phrase came from a conservative website, but the far left also blasted Harris
for telling the poorest of the Central American poor “Do not come” to the
United States.
The remark had future electoral implications because
Harris’ fellow Democrats of most stripes are sympathetic to poor but
enterprising immigrants from countries like Guatemala, Honduras and El
Salvador. They blanched upon hearing her simple statement of the immigration
preferences of the current administration and all other recent ones.
Donald
Trump, for example, took heat for his treatment of immigrants, especially
children. But Barack Obama’s administration, with current President Joe Biden
as vice president, actually deported more prospective newcomers to America.
Whether
Biden seeks a second term or becomes a caretaker president who leaves after
just one, it’s all but certain Harris will one day run again for America’s
highest office.
If she
does, she could collide with Gavin Newsom, provided the governor survives this
fall’s recall election, as every nonpartisan poll indicates he will – and by a
handy margin. As a rule, politicians who triumph over recall attempts are
strengthened, the best California example being Dianne Feinstein, an unbeatable
U.S. Senate candidate after she trampled a recall attempt while mayor of San
Francisco.
If Newsom
beats the recall and then wins reelection next year, he could choose to run for
Feinstein’s Senate seat in 2024, when she will be 90, or he could opt to run
for president and thus crash into Harris.
That
would be a huge change. Newsom and Harris have shared campaign managers for
many years and have long had an informal understanding never to oppose each
other’s ambitions.
That’s
why Newsom, then lieutenant governor, stood by quietly awaiting a 2018 run for
governor while Harris won an open Senate seat with little competition in 2016.
But their understanding might not survive the reality that time is passing and
neither is getting younger.
Until
Harris’ Latin American trip, Newsom had never uttered a critical word about the
vice president, who – like Newsom -- got her start in San Francisco politics,
winning two terms as district attorney before becoming California’s attorney
general and then a senator.
But
Harris no sooner returned to Washington, D.C.. from her trip than Newsom
checked in on the side of left-wing Democrats like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez,
who earlier blasted Harris for her anti-immigration remarks. In a press
conference just after Harris’ return, Newsom observed that “California has long
had a different approach to immigration, a more inclusive approach.” He added
that he has consulted with other federal officials about “how California can be
more supportive in terms of the needs of asylum seekers.”
That’s
not exactly the Harris approach these days. In fact, her blunt advice for the Central
American poor to stay put was reminiscent of her generally pro-police responses
to law enforcement excesses while she was attorney general.
So could
Newsom and Harris ever face off in a presidential primary? Their mutual
campaign manager, Dan Newman, did not respond to emails seeking to ask him
about that possibility.
For sure,
it would be entirely unprecedented for two top politicos from the same state to
vie for the same party’s nomination for president. It could set up a situation
where they split what amounts to a pro-California vote, letting someone else
slip past and get the nomination.
Right
now, Harris is best positioned to win the next Democratic nomination race,
whenever and however Biden leaves the Oval Office. But she could be weakened in
a primary by alienating the party’s left, which demonstrated its clout by
keeping Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders a prominent candidate for most of the last
decade.
Newsom,
of course, could also opt to play the waiting-his-turn game again and spend
years in the Senate if he took the Feinstein seat.
There’s a
lot uncertain here for both Harris and Newsom, but the possibilities are
entertaining, at the very least.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias
at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,"
is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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