<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Saturday,  November 2 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
Opinion
The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
News / Opinion / Columns

Schmidt: Will voters care about Harris’ reversal on border?

By Lynn Schmidt
Published: August 24, 2024, 6:01am

Anyone who has gone fishing, caught one and had it wiggle out of their hands, knows that while a fish is flopping around searching for a way back to the water, there is no predicting exactly where it will land or on which side will be up once it does.

So it goes with politics. The wiggling fish is Vice President Kamala Harris’ words and actions on immigration and border security. Watching from the dock are a small number of swing voters waiting to see where this issue touches down.

Since President Joe Biden stepped down as the Democratic Party’s nominee, Harris indeed has the wind at her back. She has captured momentum, money, enthusiasm and the media’s attention. It also appears that many voters who described themselves as “double haters” when it was a Biden/Trump race are rewarding the Democrats for changing the top of their ticket.

But in an election that is likely to come down to a few thousand votes in five or so states, the question remains: Will the electorate reward or punish Harris for her flip-flopping on the top issue concerning voters.

In February, Gallup noted that “immigration” surged as the leader in its Most Important Problem List. Gallup also released a poll last month which showed that 55 percent of Americans want immigration levels reduced, the highest since 2001.

The country’s feelings about immigration run counter to what Harris was selling during her 2019 presidential campaign. Back then she supported decriminalizing illegal entry to the U.S. and even backed offering health care to those who entered illegally.

In 2021, Biden tasked his vice president to address the root causes of mass migration from Central and South America. There has been a lot of back and forth in the media about whether she could fairly have been called the “Border Czar,” but that misses the point. It doesn’t matter what the role was called; what’s important is the responsibility laid at her feet.

Now, as the Democratic presidential nominee, Harris has done a 180-degree turn on immigration.

At a recent rally in Arizona, Politico reported, Harris messaged the following points to the crowd: highlighting her record as attorney general of border state California in combating transnational crime; promising to fight for “strong border security”; attacking Trump for killing bipartisan border legislation earlier this year; and promising to sign a similar bill if she became president.

Harris has yet in the current campaign to sit down for an interview or take questions in a formal press conference. It is therefore difficult to know exactly where she stands on the issues of immigration and border security and how a Harris administration would govern with regards to our southern border.

In a recent Bulwark podcast, statistician and founder of the polling analysis website FiveThirtyEight, Nate Silver, attempted to describe Harris’ underperformance as vice president as opposed to her current overperformance as a presidential candidate.

“She got some rough assignments, like the border and, like, voting rights, which is not inherently a tough assignment, but the one thing they weren’t able to really do anything about,” Silver said.

When pundits use the term “rough assignment” to describe only one duty, it does not give voters much confidence that Harris can handle all the other facets of the job combined were she to win the presidency.

The caveat to all of the above is that Harris is running against former president and Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump. The Trump campaign is struggling to find a coherent message and its top messenger is deeply flawed. Therefore, for the very fact that she is not Trump, Harris’ immigration flip-flops may not matter in the end.


Lynn Schmidt is a columnist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.

Loading...