Wave Wire Services
LOS ANGELES — California Sen. Kamala Harris has been chosen as presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden’s vice presidential running mate, a selection that quickly earned rave reviews among Southland Democrats.
“I have the great honor to announce that I’ve picked [Harris] — a fearless fighter for the little guy, and one of the country’s finest public servants — as my running mate,” Biden announced via his Twitter page Aug. 11.
Harris, 55, is the first Black and South Asian woman to run on the ticket of a major political party. Biden vowed during a primary debate in March that he would pick a woman as his running mate.
After the selection was announced, Harris — who despite her Northern California political background lives on Los Angeles’ westside — wrote on Twitter: “Joe Biden can unify the American people because he’s spent his life fighting for us. And as president, he’ll build an America that lives up to our ideals. I’m honored to join him as our party’s nominee for vice president, and do what it takes to make him our commander-in-chief.”
The selection ended hopes of Rep. Karen Bass, D-Los Angeles, of becoming the vice presidential candidate. She was among those being vetted for a spot on the ticket. CNN reported that Biden personally called Bass to inform her of his decision.
Bass took to Twitter to hail the selection of Harris.
“Her tenacious pursuit of justice and relentless advocacy for the people is what is needed right now,” Bass wrote. “I worked closely with her when I was in Sacramento and she was the district attorney in San Francisco. I continue to work closely with her here in Washington, D.C., as we push to reform our nation’s policing system. California is better because of her work as attorney general and stronger because of her work as senator. Now all Americans will benefit from her work as vice president.”
Others reported to have been under consideration included Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former National Security Adviser Susan Rice, Illinois Sen. Tammy Duckworth and Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
In recent days, speculation focused more narrowly on Harris and Rice.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, the national co-chair of the Biden for President Campaign and co-chair of the campaign’s vice presidential selection committee, recalled his time working with Harris on Barack Obama’s presidential campaign and during her time serving as state attorney general.
“She is passionate. She is powerful. She is brilliant. She is compassionate,” Garcetti said. “Kamala Harris will help Joe Biden unite the American people, restore our nation’s soul, and rebuild our country so it’s even stronger than it was before.
“I’m proud that our vice presidential selection process vetted and elevated so many women, each of whom is qualified to lead our country. This was not a political process. We worked to build a team — one that puts women at the table, one that looks like America, and one with the patriotism, qualifications and unity to help Joe Biden conquer this virus and build back better.”
Harris mounted a presidential campaign of her own, grabbing early headlines for a daring attack in the first debate against a fellow candidate — Biden — challenging his past opposition to busing to integrate schools. But she ultimately dropped her campaign.
Before serving as senator and state attorney general, Harris was the first Black woman to serve as San Francisco district attorney. Harris will be the first California candidate on a major political party’s presidential ticket since Ronald Reagan in 1984.
Not surprisingly, the selection met with quick criticism from President Donald Trump, who tweeted a campaign video attacking Harris, saying she launched her failed presidential bid by “rushing to the radical left, embracing Bernie’s plan for socialized medicine, calling for trillions in new taxes, attacking Joe Biden for racist policies.” The ad concludes, “Sloe Joe and Phony Kamala: perfect together, wrong for America.”
Speaking at a subsequent White House news conference, Trump told reporters he was “a little surprised” at the choice, saying she “did very, very poorly in the primaries.”
Trump referred to Harris as “nasty,” referring to comments she made during confirmation hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
The Trump campaign issued a statement saying Harris is willing to “abandon her own morals, as well as try to bury her record as a prosecutor, in order to appease the anti-police extremists controlling the Democrat Party.”
But reaction among Southland community leaders and Democrats was swift and expectedly glowing.
“Biden/Harris a winning combination for a better America!” former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa crowed on Twitter.
County Supervisor Janice Hahn added, “I have been proud to call Kamala Harris my senator and I look forward to calling her madam vice president. Good #VPPick, Joe Biden.”
Melina Abdullah, one of the founders and leaders of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles, wrote, “As much as I wanted it to be [Bass], I told y’all from the beginning that [Biden] was gonna pick [Harris]. Somebody owes me a dollar.”
Rick Chavez, executive director of the Los Angeles-based LGBTQ advocacy group Equality California, called Harris an “exceptional choice.”
“Throughout her career, Senator Harris has demonstrated an unwavering commitment to civil rights and social justice for all LGBTQ+ people,” Chavez said in a statement. “As vice president, we are confident she will continue Vice President Biden’s tradition of using the office to champion and advance full, lived LGBTQ+ equality — and equality for the diverse communities to which LGBTQ+ people belong.”
Mark Gonzalez, chairman of the Los Angeles County Democratic Party, also hailed the selection.
“The daughter of immigrants, Senator Harris’ long, distinguished career not only as a public servant fighting for justice, but her continuous fight for working families all across our country is exactly what our nation needs in this crucial time,” Gonzalez said.
Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Los Angeles, wrote on Twitter that Biden had made a historic selection.
“I believe that the two of them together will respect and honor our Constitution, strengthen our democracy and economy and work for a good quality of life for our children and families,” Waters wrote.
Angelica Salas, president of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights Los Angeles Action Fund, said Harris’ selection should be cheered by immigrants.
“She has been with us when we needed her, defending our community against all the noxious policies of President Trump and protesting alongside us outside the detention centers,” Salas said. “We know she will work to ensure our families are reunited and our children are liberated.”