Vice President Kamala Harris is in a better spot than most of her predecessors at this point in her term. President Joe Biden, who himself is the first vice president to ascend to the role since 1988, has made sure to save some of the limelight for his No. 2: “The Biden-Harris administration” is the preferred nomenclature, thank you very much, a phrase that is plastered on the White House website and every statement issued where their names share top billing.
It’s all part and parcel with Biden’s desire during the campaign to have a “full partner in government” in Harris once in office. What’s more equal than both co-stars getting their name on the top of the poster? Once you look into how that translates in terms of her actual function within the administration, though, Harris’ partnership with Biden starts to seem a bit less groundbreaking.
What’s more equal than both co-stars getting their name on the top of the poster?
Harris, like most modern vice presidents, is no slouch at getting ad hoc responsibilities added to her few constitutional duties — she’s currently in the middle of a tour of Central America to help deter migration to the southern border. But as this trip is showing, her higher-than-normal profile doesn’t mean she gets the easy gigs. In fact, she’s just as likely as any VP to get the jobs that almost nobody would volunteer to take on.
Case in point: Harris is getting less than rave reviews of her current international jaunt. Her assigned task is to help address the issues in the “Northern Triangle” of Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras that drive residents north — poverty, corruption and violence, all of which have ties to U.S. policies past and present.
Standing next to Guatemalan President Alejandro Giammattei on Monday, Harris had a direct message: “I want to be clear to folks in this region who are thinking about making that dangerous trek to the United States-Mexico border: Do not come, do not come.”
It’s the same message Biden gave in March to ABC News and that Roberta Jacobson, the White House coordinator for the southern border, gave in Spanish in the White House briefing room. But in repeating the administration’s policy, Harris became a lightning rod for criticism from her fellow Democrats.
This is disappointing to see.
— Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC) June 7, 2021
First, seeking asylum at any US border is a 100% legal method of arrival.
Second, the US spent decades contributing to regime change and destabilization in Latin America. We can’t help set someone’s house on fire and then blame them for fleeing. https://t.co/vADyh5H0bw
In theory, the more jobs on your desk as vice president, the better to show you have the leadership skills needed to take on the presidency yourself someday. Given the list of what’s on her plate so far, courtesy of The New York Times, it’s a maxim Harris buys into:








