President Joe Biden’s historic exit from the White House race and endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris to replace him marks a thrilling turn of events for many Democrats. Biden’s re-election prospects had been looking terrible. Harris has injected an air of new possibility into the race, and she instantly benefits from not being dogged by questions about her mental acuity.
Harris is taking control of Biden’s campaign operation, garnering endorsements from across the party and positioning herself as the favorite for the Democratic presidential nomination. But it is imperative that she not allow her candidacy to be defined purely in negative terms as a generic alternative to someone undesirable: It is not enough to not be Joe Biden. It is not enough to not be Donald Trump. If Harris wants to make a splash, re-introduce herself to the public and have a decent shot at beating the former president, then she must embrace a compelling policy vision and sell it with gusto. This is an arena in which Biden largely failed. Harris needs to avoid making the same mistake.
It would be negligence of the highest order for Harris to not adopt the language and policy vision of economic populism.
The Biden-Harris campaign had focused mostly on selling re-election as a way to protect democracy and abortion rights. Those are deeply important ideas that can fire up the Democratic base. But most American voters are not the Democratic base, and Democrats need to get their attention and secure trust their trust by unveiling policies that pique their interest. This is a realm in which Harris can improve upon Biden’s platform and shore up her potential weaknesses against Trump. The Democratic Party must not just stand against things. It must stand for things.
Less politically engaged voters and swing voters have an outsize interest in economic issues, and polling data indicates that Trump tends to poll better than Biden on the economy. A set of recent surveys from The New York Times, Siena College and The Philadelphia Inquirer found that a large majority of voters in five battleground states want sweeping change in our economic and political systems. And even though inflation has subsided, Americans persistently believe that the cost of living is too high. Big, bold proposals that acknowledge that there are big structural problems in the way our economy distributes wages, wealth and freedom can engage and excite people. It would be negligence of the highest order for Harris to not adopt the language and policy vision of economic populism as a focal point of her campaign.








