CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 2025 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“THE KEY QUESTION FOR KAMALA HARRIS”
The polls show
Kamala Harris holds the approval of about 50 percent of California voters as
she heads into a self-assigned summer of decision making about her political
future.
Does the former
vice president who lost last year’s election by just 1.6 percent of the popular
vote want to give up on the possibility of succeeding Donald Trump as
president? Is she ready to deal with all the detailed and complex issues that
constantly confront any California governor? Can she raise the $100 million or
so minimum needed to be a credible candidate for governor?
These are just
some of the items on Harris’ mind as she disapprovingly watches Trump run the
government in a confrontational manner completely foreign to her.
But she knows
that if she does not run for president in 2028, she will forfeit any advantage
she would possess as a barely beaten candidate last time out, one whose defeat
now has many 2024 Trump voters feeling a bit of buyer’s remorse.
She also knows
that if she goes for governor, she will have to promise to serve out a full
term in that office should she win. Reneging on that pledge would likely doom
her in any presidential primary election, tagging her as a non-promise keeper.
But keeping such a pledge also takes her out of the 2028 presidential running.
It's a rare
quandary no previous California Democrat has faced. The huge question for
Harris: Does she care enough about the details of California issues from
electric vehicle mandates to Medi-Cal for the undocumented to give up on her
national ambitions, at least for most of her 60s? (Harris will be 63 on
Election Day 2026.)
For sure, Harris
bears the image of a surfacy politician. Rivals also blame her for failing to
disclose just how disabled ex-President Joe Biden became. Few can name salient
achievements of either her six years as state attorney general or her four
years as Biden’s No. 2.
Some of those are
substantial: During the fiscal crisis of 2009-2012, when many thousands of
mortgages were threatened with foreclosure, she leveraged California’s sheer
size to jump the state’s share of a 2012 national mortgage settlement up from
an initial top offer of $4 billion to $18 billion, helping an unknown but large
number of Californians evade foreclosure.
Between 2013 and
2015, her office recouped more than $1 billion for the state’s major public
employee retirement funds after banks and rating agencies lied to greatly
overvalue mortgage-backed securities.
She also secured
a 2012 agreement with Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon and HP to require all
apps they sell to display clear new privacy policies – and then she created a
state privacy enforcement unit to seal that deal.
Her record was
less noteworthy as vice president, partly because Biden assigned her impossible
tasks, like fixing conditions in Latin America that encourage illegal
immigration. That assignment did not come with the power to make any
improvements.
So the Harris
image as a lightweight, promoted in part by her cackling responses in some
interviews, can be misleading and other candidates for governor would be wise
not to underestimate her.
But there remains
that key question: How interested is Harris in pursuing the state’s problems
all the way to solutions, from the fate of the partially-built bullet train to
the pesky and expensive issue of caring for indigent immigrants?
No one really
knows, perhaps not even Harris. That’s what makes this question so vital in a
campaign where other candidates like former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa and former state Atty. Gen. and federal Health Secretary Xavier
Becerra are known for their strong interest in taking on major issues.
Candidates like former state Senate President Toni Atkins and former state
Controller Betty Yee are similarly known for strong focus.
If Harris runs
and debates them all, plus Republicans Steve Hilton and Chad Bianco, they will
surely be trying to paint her as the lightweight of her reputation and not the
accomplished politician of her reality.
Which makes
running a big risk for Harris, who could lose out as a major national player if
she enters this race, regardless of whether she wins or loses.
-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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