Washington: Kamala Harris spoke slowly but bluntly as she stared at Joe Biden, then began treating him as a hostile witness. The former prosecutor turned California senator started by saying she didn’t think the former vice-president ‘was a racist’. But she criticised him for recently ‘defending segregationists’ in the Senate and for once opposing mandatory bus services to students of public schools.
Harris described a young girl in the 1970s who boarded such buses before dramatically offering, “That little girl was me.”
The moment was as powerful as it was unexpected, a searing line of attack against Biden, who served as vice-president to the first African American president Barrack Obama.
Biden entered back-to-back nights of Democratic presidential debates in Miami as the leading Democratic candidate. Harris showed promise but had not made much of a mark lately. That changed Thursday.
That Harris and other Democratic presidential hopefuls would come out swinging against Biden was no surprise, and her verbal strike was hardly spontaneous.
Moments after the exchange, her campaign team tweeted a picture of a school-age Harris with pigtails, over the caption: “There was a little girl in California who was bussed to school. That little girl was me.”
In deeply personal tones, Harris hammered Biden for policy choices that she suggested betrayed the spirit of the civil rights movement, if not directly opposing all it stood for. Then she really hit her stride, exhibiting the controlled force of a practiced cross-examiner.
“Do you agree today that you were wrong to oppose busing in America?” Harris asked. A visibly angry Biden responded that his record was mischaracterised. But he was left denying Harris’ comments on a technicality. He said he didn’t oppose public school busing, just it being ordered by the Department of Education — decrying federal intervention on the issue on behalf of states.
Harris shot back, “There are moments in history where states fail to support the civil rights of people.”
Senior advisers to Biden insisted afterward that they weren’t surprised by the confrontation with Harris and were satisfied with his response in the time allowed.
“I thought it was an important moment. He (Biden) listened. And you don’t judge other people’s pain,” said Cedric Richmond, Biden’s campaign chairman.
Richmond added that, had Biden had more time, he would have spent it discussing his campaign’s focus on educational opportunity, and his work in the Obama administration curbing disproportionate school arrests of African American students.
Adding to the drama, though, was the fact that Harris and Biden have long been friends. She grew close to the former vice-president’s son, Beau, during their time as state attorneys general. Harris texted and talked with Beau Biden daily; sometimes more before his death in 2015 after being diagnosed with brain cancer.
Others also tried to hit Biden during Thursday’s debate. Mere moments into the action, 38-year-old California Rep. Eric Swalwell recalled being just six when he saw Biden speak, saying the ex-vice president was ‘right when he said it was time to pass the torch to a new generation of Americans’.
Biden, 76, was better prepared for quips about his age, retorting, “I’m still holding onto that torch.”
AP