Consider This from NPR - Former 'Top Cop' Kamala Harris And America's Reckoning With Police
Episode Date: August 12, 2020No major political party has ever put a woman of color on a presidential ticket. Until now, when Senator Kamala Harris — a former district attorney and state attorney general — is meeting a moment... of national reckoning with the role of law enforcement in American life. Email the show at considerthis@npr.org.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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My fellow Americans, let me introduce to you, for the first time,
your next Vice President of the United States, Kamala Harris.
Kamala, the floor is yours.
A major political party has never put a woman of color on a presidential ticket. Until now.
As I said, Joe, when you called me, I am incredibly honored by this responsibility
and I'm ready to get to work. I am ready to get to work.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris today in Delaware.
The president's mismanagement of the pandemic has plunged us into the worst economic crisis
since the Great Depression. And we're experiencing a moral reckoning with racism and systemic injustice that has brought a new coalition of conscience to the streets of our country demanding change.
Coming up, what Harris's former experience as a prosecutor means right now when a lot of people around the country are talking about remaking law enforcement and how her career in the Senate brought her to this moment.
This is Consider This from NPR. I'm Kelly McEvers. It is Wednesday, August 12th.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Integrative Therapeutics,
creator of Physician's Elemental Diet, a medical food developed by
clinicians for the dietary management of IBS, IBD, and SIBO under the supervision of a physician.
So back when she was attorney general for the state of California, Kamala Harris described
herself as the state's top cop. And she got a lot of criticism for that. Some of those cases where that came up
were some statewide ballot initiatives where she did not take a position on one in particular that
would have reduced some felonies to misdemeanors. Chris Catalago, a reporter with Politico, has
covered Kamala Harris for years. One of those state ballot initiatives he's talking about when Harris didn't take a position was from 2014.
It downgraded some drug and property crimes from felonies to misdemeanors.
Harris also didn't say much when it came to a sentencing reform effort that was passed by voters or for a ballot initiative that legalized recreational marijuana.
And before all that, when she was district attorney in San Francisco,
Harris threatened to prosecute parents whose kids missed school. Now Catalago says,
Now I think people have really come to digest the new environment that we're in with really
the Black Lives Matter movement really taking hold across the country. And I think
you've seen prosecutors across the country come out and really take much stronger what some folks would call activist positions. We should say in 2004, when she was San
Francisco DA, Harris did take a position that was seen as activist at the time. She refused to seek
a death sentence for a man who had shot and killed a cop with an AK-47. The city's police union was so
opposed to that decision, they asked the state to take the case away from Kamala Harris. But she
said flat out at the time, the death penalty is disproportionately applied to people of color,
and she would not support it under any circumstance. Later, though, as state attorney general,
she told voters she would enforce capital punishment.
And she did.
Here's how she responded to her critics last year.
It is my belief that when you want to reform systems, when you want to change systems,
there is no question that there's a very extremely effective role to be played
in terms of advocacy from the outside of the systems.
In fact, you know, there's so much change that has happened for the better because of strong advocacy from the outside of certain systems.
But I also believe that it is important to be in the room where the decisions are being made.
This is Harris talking to NPR. In recent years, as a senator, when she has been in those rooms where decisions get made,
she has supported marijuana legalization, voted for major sentencing reform laws,
and supported plans to reduce incarceration rates.
She said on The View this year that America needs to, quote,
reimagine how we do public safety in America.
We have confused the idea that to achieve safety, you put more cops on the street. Instead of
understanding to achieve safe and healthy communities, you put more resources into the
public education system of those communities, into affordable housing, into home ownership,
into access to capital for small businesses, access to health care, regardless of how much In the end, it's clear that Harris has evolved on criminal justice.
And her argument about her past experience as a prosecutor boils down to this.
It's much harder to change the system if you don't have a role inside the system.
Here's more of what she said to NPR.
My parents were active in the civil rights movement. I grew up acutely aware of the
inequities in the criminal justice system. And so when I made a decision to become a prosecutor,
it was because, I mean, it was a very extremely conscious decision. Listen,
the people in my community were like, what? You're going to go do that?
Why would you do that?
Why aren't you going to be a public defender?
And I said, well, because it is the prosecutors who make the decisions about who's going to be charged.
Is the juvenile going to be charged as a juvenile or adult?
Democratic surrogates have already been making this argument, too.
South Carolina Representative Jim Clyburn told NPR on Tuesday that people of color should be more represented in all parts of the justice system,
including as prosecutors.
Now, if you've got a problem with the way Kamala Harris conducted herself as a prosecutor,
then that's fair game.
But you can't criticize her for being a prosecutor.
That's what we're trying to do. Get people of color and people of various backgrounds,
gender, into these positions.
As for how she talks about race...
I couldn't agree more that this is an issue
that is still not being talked about truthfully and honestly.
Last year, in a Democratic primary debate,
Kamala Harris made a point to highlight something Joe Biden had said,
that he had had a civil working relationship with two segregationist lawmakers decades ago.
Two United States senators who built their reputations
and career on the segregation of race in this country.
And it was not only that, but you also worked with them to oppose busing.
And, you know, there was a little girl in California who was part of the second class to integrate her public schools,
and she was bused to school every day.
And that little girl was me.
So I will tell you that on this subject, it cannot be an intellectual debate among Democrats. We have to take it seriously.
We have to act swiftly. It was pretty tense in the moment. But an ally of Kamala Harris later
told NPR that Joe Biden, quote, has been in politics long enough that nothing
is irreparable.
It's a mischaracterization of my position across the board. I do not praise racists.
That is not true.
Before she made her way to that presidential debate stage with Joe Biden, Harris started
her national political career as the junior senator from a blue state.
Here's NPR's Kelsey Snell with my colleague Mary Louise Kelly.
Hey, Kelsey.
Hi there.
So Kamala Harris has only been Senator Harris for about three and a half years,
not so long in the grand scheme of Senate careers. How has she used her time there so far? You know, not only is it not a lot of time in Senate time, but it's also time spent in the
minority where it's notoriously difficult to get legislation passed. You know, her very first speech
on the Senate floor was all about the DREAM Act, and that's the legislation to provide a pathway
to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who are brought to the country as children. And that
has been kind of a central issue for her. She also works on justice-related issues like due process
for immigrants and that police reform bill that passed the House earlier this summer. She also works on justice-related issues like due process for immigrants and that
police reform bill that passed the House earlier this summer. She was a major figure in that.
You know, at the same time, she was one of the main sponsors of a bill to make lynching a federal
crime. Here's how she talked about the convergence of those issues. Black lives have not been taken
seriously as being fully human and deserving of dignity. And it should not require a maiming
or torture in order for us to recognize a lynching when we see it and recognize it by federal law.
So those are major issues for her. And, you know, she has been criticized for her background as a
tough-on-crime attorney general back in California, but supporters say her record in the Senate has really been focused on justice and due process.
Speaking of the background that propelled her to the Senate, she, among other past lives,
she was a prosecutor. How has she used that experience?
You know, it has given her a reputation as a person who will ask direct and pointed questions.
I'm thinking about the confirmation hearings for Brett Kavanaugh, now Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. She asked him to address specific abortion-related cases and whether or not they were correctly decided. She also got into a contentious exchange with him over his insistence that the investigation into allegations of his past sexual misconduct were as a witch hunt. You know, that got a lot of national attention. And she, you know, her tough questioning really did frustrate President
Trump. And it's something he's brought up repeatedly. He's called her treatment of Kavanaugh
nasty, which is a term he has typically reserved for women. So that is how the president says he
sees her. What about how her colleagues in the Senate see her, Kelsey, as somebody who has walked
those halls at Capitol Hill and watched a lot of Senate hearings? How is she perceived there?
You know, I've talked to a lot of her colleagues, Democrats and Republicans, and they say she's a
very active member on the committee she works on. She does intelligence and judiciary and homeland
security. People say she's the kind of member who does her homework, and she's a person who really
wants to understand policy. They say she's tried to find bipartisan co-sponsors when she could,
though we know that that is often difficult in Congress.
They point to things like election security and maternal health.
Though I will say a major criticism that I heard is that she doesn't have much of a track record of actually passing laws.
Though it is actually a tale of legislating in the Trump era writ large.
It's hard to get legislation passed right now, and it hasn't really been the story of this Congress in general. So she works on some very sought-after committees, and it's given her a really big opportunity to be in the
mix on issues like immigration that would be very important to the American story, no matter who is
president. So pull it all together for us. What does her Senate career tell us about what kind
of vice presidential candidate she's going to be? Well, as we've said, we know she's not afraid of
conflict and that she's direct and known for her follow-ups, like we saw in primary debates where she was
criticizing her running mate, Joe Biden. And she's got a quick and ready response. I think a good
example of her using that technique in the Senate was when she was questioning Attorney General
William Barr. Here she is. Attorney General Barr, has the president or anyone at the White House ever asked or suggested that you open an investigation of anyone?
I wouldn't.
Yes or no?
Could you repeat that question?
I will repeat it.
So you hear there her kind of catching him off guard and moving him into a place where he had to come up with a response.
And she's not afraid to step in if someone appears to be filibustering or answering insufficiently. So I expect to see more of that
when she debates Vice President Mike Pence in the fall.
NPR's Kelsey Snell. Additional reporting in this episode from our colleagues at All Things
Considered and the NPR Politics Podcast. For more news, download the NPR One app or listen to your local public radio station.
Supporting that station makes this podcast possible.
I'm Kelly McEvers.
We will be back with more tomorrow.
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