U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris brings an aggressive approach to politics and public policy, deep electoral experience and hands-on expertise in the beleaguered U.S. criminal justice system as Joe Biden's running mate.
Harris, at 55 a full generation younger than Biden, also imparts a youthful persona and diversity, with Jamaican and Indian ancestry that may help Biden, as a 77-year-old white man, energize a Democratic base that is rapidly becoming younger, more female and less white.
But Harris comes with a track record as attorney general of California and district attorney of San Francisco, where she was known as being tough on minority defendants, an issue she will likely need to address in the days remaining in the campaign.
She at times proved a lackluster campaigner in the primaries, which she quit in December after failing to give voters a clear idea of what she stood for.
Here's a look at the assets and liabilities Harris brings to the Biden campaign.
Asset: Electoral experience
Harris has run in statewide elections in California three times and won each time. She was narrowly elected attorney general in 2010 and re-elected by a larger margin in 2014. In November 2016, she won the right to replace outgoing Sen. Barbara Boxer by defeating Rep. Loretta Sanchez.
She was first elected to public office in 2003 when she defeated the incumbent district attorney of San Francisco, Terence Hallinan, partly by branding him "soft on crime."
Liability: Unclear campaign persona
Harris's presidential campaign was hobbled by her struggle to convey clearly what she stood for in an election in which voters demanded authenticity.