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The question everyone has been asking in hushed tones now grows to a roar: Does Kamala Harris have what it takes to beat Donald Trump?
God, I hope so. The future of American democracy might depend on it.
Harris’ sudden candidacy represents hope that is desperately needed among the centrist and left-leaning American electorate, many of whom could not imagine President Joe Biden beating Trump.
Now that the party has listened to voters and Biden has been convinced to step aside, it’s time for us to line up behind Harris.
But as much as centrists and progressives alike would love to see a woman of color in the Oval Office, it’s going to be a tough campaign over the next few months for 59-year-old Harris, whose vice presidency has been marred with embarrassing political missteps as much as there’s been rampant racism and misogyny to block her way.
Harris’s approval rating slumped drastically in the first year, making her one of the least popular vice presidents in history. But partly, at least, that narrative comes from one bad poll conducted in 2021, in the depths of the early pandemic and during a downturn in the economy that we’ve still not been able to bounce back from. The numbers also showed a dip in Biden’s approval at the same time. So how much of this was bad press early on that has just, well, stuck around?