Top Stories
News24 | ANALYSIS | With Kamala Harris, US Democrats would bet against US history of sexism, racism

Top Stories Tamfitronics

The US Democratic party will be taking a historic gamble if it now turns to Vice President Kamala Harris to become its presidential candidate, betting that a black woman can overcome racism, sexism and her own missteps as a politician to defeat Republican Donald Trump.

American President Joe Biden, 81, announced on Sunday he was ending his campaign for reelection, while staying on as president for the remainder of his term. In a separate post on X, formerly Twitter, he endorsed Harris.

“My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President. And it’s been the best decision I’ve made,” Biden wrote. “Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year.”

Biden’s decision comes after weeks of pressure from Democratic lawmakers and donors who feared he lacked the mental and physical stamina to win and serve four more years.

In more than two centuries of democracy, American voters have elected only one black president and never a woman, a record that makes even some black voters wonder if Harris can crash through the hardest ceiling in U.S. politics.

“Will her race and gender be an issue? Absolutely,” said LaTosha Brown, a political strategist and co-founder of the Black Voters Matter Fund.

FOLLOW LIVE |Joe Biden is out of the race; endorsements for Kamala Harris start coming in

Harris would face other big challenges: if promoted to the top of the ticket, she would have barely three months to campaign and unite the party and donors behind her. But many Democrats are excited about her chances.

Harris, 59, is two decades younger than Trump and a leader in the party on abortion rights, an issue which resonates with younger voters and Democrats’ progressive base. Proponents argue she would energize those voters, consolidate black support, and bring sharp debating skills to prosecute the political case against the former president.

Her candidacy would offer a contrast with Trump and his vice presidential running mate, Senator J.D. Vance, the two white men on the Republican ticket, Brown said.

“That to me is reflective of America’s past. She is reflective of America’s now and future,” Brown said.

But despite earning praise in the last few weeks for her strong defense of Biden, some Democrats remain concerned about Harris’ shaky first two years in office, short-lived campaign for the 2020 Democratic nomination, and – perhaps most of all – the weight of a long history of racial and gender discrimination in the United States.

‘No safe option’

In a hypothetical head-to-head matchup, Harris and Trump were tied with 44% support each in a July 15 to July 16 Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted immediately after the assassination attempt against Trump. Trump led Biden 43% to 41% in that same poll, though the 2 percentage point difference was within the poll’s 3 percentage point margin of error.

Harris’s approval ratings, while low, are a tick higher than Biden’s. According to polling outfit Five Thirty Eight, 38.6 percent of Americans approve of Harris while 50.4 percent disapprove. Biden has 38.5 percent approval and 56.2 percent disapproval.

“If you think that there is consensus among the people who want Joe Biden to leave that they will support Kamala – Vice President Harris – you would be mistaken,” Representative Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez, a Biden supporter, said on Instagram. “There’s no safe option.”

The United States elected Barack Obama, the first and only black president, in 2008. The only woman to head a presidential ticket of a major party, Hillary Clinton, lost to Trump in 2016.

Supporters of Harris, the first woman and first black and South Asian person to serve as vice president, argue she has already weathered unfair attacks related to her race and gender and is prepared for more.

“America has a history of racism, sexism, so I’m sure that will factor into this conversation, factor into her campaign,” said Jamal Simmons, a former Harris aide.

But he said there is a flip side: black voters could be galvanized if Harris is put at the top of the ticket, and women, including some who regret not voting for Clinton in 2016, would back her as well.

“It’s also true that she will benefit from her race and her gender, that many African Americans may rally to her candidacy,” he said.

Harris benefits from greater name recognition than the other Democratic leaders who have been floated as potential presidential candidates, he said. California Governor Gavin Newsom and Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer are among those talked about in Democratic circles as possible replacements.

“While she has flaws and faults like everyone, we know those flaws and faults, so you can build a campaign with clarity. Any other candidates are complete unknowns,” Simmons said.

One former Democratic lawmaker, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he thought Harris was a bigger risk because of her record than her race.

Harris was plagued by staff turnover at the beginning of her vice presidency and showed little progress on her portfolios of protecting voting rights and stemming migration from Central America.

“I think the race thing is just a compounding factor or an exacerbating factor,” the former lawmaker said. “Any of it’s going to be a gamble, but I like the odds with another candidate, even if that means Kamala at the top of the ticket.”

‘Patriarchy is a hell of a drug’

Critics have accused Trump of using racist and sexist language, explicitly and in code. In 2020 he said he had “heard” Harris, a U.S. citizen born in California, did not qualify to be a candidate for vice president.

At a rally in Michigan on Saturday, Trump piled on Harris for the way she laughs.

“I call her Laughing Kamala,” Trump said. “You ever watch her laugh? She’s crazy.”

Trump’s campaign said Democrats were deploying “classic disinformation” about his language and noted Harris’s dispute with Biden in a 2019 debate about school busing and her criticism of Biden for working with segregationists in the Senate.

“In contrast, President Trump is polling at record-high levels with African Americans,” Trump campaign senior adviser Jason Miller said in a statement.

Trump made false “birtherism” claims against Obama, who was born in Hawaii. Those falsehoods gained traction among far-right activists and his nationalist base, prompting an exasperated Obama, blasting “carnival barkers,” to release a longer version of his birth certificate from the White House.

Polling at the time showed a quarter of all Americans – and 45 percent of Republicans – believed Obama had not been born in the country.

“You’ve got birtherism 2.0,” said Cliff Albright, co-founder and CEO of Black Voters Matter Fund, an Atlanta-based non-profit, referring to Harris.

Nadia Brown, director of the women’s and gender studies program at Georgetown University, said despite the rise of black political leaders, there remains a notable reluctance to accept women in key leadership roles.

“Patriarchy is a hell of a drug,” Brown said. “With racism, we know it, we can call it out. The mood that we’re not seeing as articulately expressed is a real reticence to have a black woman in particular as a leader.”

Harris’s standing in the party has improved with her aggressive advocacy for reproductive rights after the Supreme Court in 2022 struck down Roe v Wade, which protected women’s right to abortion.

Biden credited her with helping to prevent a “red wave” of Republican victories in that year’s midterm elections, and Harris has crisscrossed the country as a top campaign spokesperson on abortion rights.

Harris could also inherit Biden’s strong support among black voters, who helped propel him to the 2020 Democratic nomination.

But if the party ends up coalescing around Harris, she could receive some of the blame from voters who say Democratic leaders covered up Biden’s frailties.

“I’m kind of done with the Democrats. So many knew about Biden’s condition and hid it. Kamala was part of that,” said Gina Gannon, 65, a retiree in the battleground state of Georgia, who voted for Trump in 2016 and Biden in 2020.

Top Stories
News24 | ANALYSIS | Joe Biden, a stubborn President who fought a battle too far

Top Stories Tamfitronics

Top Stories Tamfitronics Kamala Harris speaks during a press conference with President Joe Biden in August 2020. (Olivier DOULIERY / AFP)

Kamala Harris speaks during a press conference with President Joe Biden in August 2020. (Olivier DOULIERY / AFP)

Joe Biden wanted to save the “soul of America” from Donald Trump, but his stubborn defiance of the march of time may have cleared his rival’s path back to power.

Biden caved in to growing pressure Sunday and announced he is dropping out of the presidential race, amid concerns over his mental acuity and ability to beat Trump and serve four more years.

As he fought for his political survival after a disastrous debate, the 81-year-old Democrat repeatedly cited his family’s mantra that “when you get knocked down, get back up again.”

From playground punch-ups to a stutter to terrible family tragedies, Biden had long seen his life story as a series of comebacks against impossible odds.

And it was his triumph four years ago against Trump that convinced Biden that, despite being the oldest president in US history, he was the only one who could do it again — until he threw in the towel on Sunday.

FOLLOW LIVE |Joe Biden is out of the race; endorsements for Kamala Harris start coming in

Overcoming his reputation as a gaffe machine, Biden initially lived up to his goal as a “unifier in chief” after the Trump years and the shock of the 6 January 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

But the question of his age always loomed large.

Biden eventually joked about it but always denied it was an issue, even after a debate where his rambling answers and listless stare sparked a revolt by Democrats.

A mix of pride and his conviction that Trump was a threat to democracy kept Biden fighting until it was, perhaps, too late.

Franklin Foer, author of a book on the Biden presidency, wrote recently that “humiliation — and its transcendence — is Biden’s origin story.”

“Right now it is his psychological prison, a mental habit that might doom American democracy,” he wrote in the Atlantic.

‘Cruel losses’

That outlook was largely formed by a hardscrabble childhood in Scranton, Pennsylvania, in the American rust-belt.

Biden was part of a close-knit Irish Catholic family — he was just the second Catholic US president after his hero John F. Kennedy — that was known for its intense pride.

His mother Jean told the young Joey and his siblings every day that “nobody was better than a Biden,” Ben Cramer wrote in his book “What It Takes,” about the 1988 US election campaign.

He was also known for never backing down.

“He decided to fight… BANGO — he’d punch the guy in the face,” Cramer wrote.

One affliction Biden famously had to battle was a childhood stutter.

Repeatedly humiliated at school, the young Biden ended up teaching himself how to speak smoothly by sheer determination, repeating phrases again and again into the mirror.

But Biden’s biggest test was yet to come.

In 1972, he was only 29 and had just won an unlikely victory to be elected senator for Delaware when his wife Neilia and their one-year-old daughter Naomi were killed in a car crash. Their young sons Beau and Hunter were left badly injured.

Tragedy struck again in 2015 when Beau died of brain cancer, aged 46.

Biden also had to deal with the agony of Hunter’s drug addiction and legal problems.

“Sometimes I marvel at Joe’s strength. His life has been marked by cruel losses,” First Lady Jill Biden, whom Biden married in 1977, said in her memoir “Where the Light Enters.”

‘President for all Americans’

With his family close around him, Biden did not let two failed presidential bids — and a nearly fatal aneurysm in 1988 — discourage him.

He served as Barack Obama’s vice president for two terms, and his stubborn persistence in pursuit of the top job paid off when he came out of retirement to beat Trump in 2020, defying critics who said he was too old.

Saying at his inauguration he wanted to be a “president for all Americans,” his old-fashioned centrism was a relief to many after the divisiveness of the Trump years.

At home he forced through a massive Covid recovery scheme and a green investment plan.

In Kamala Harris, his likely successor to the Democratic nomination, he appointed the first female, Black and South Asian vice president in US history.

US allies welcomed his pledge that “America is back” and his strong support for Ukraine.

But despite the best efforts of the White House to limit his public appearances, his age became the story again.

A series of senior moments culminated in the disastrous debate performance against Trump that doomed his bid for a second term.

As he fought to save it, he returned to the image of the underdog, often repeating his father’s saying: “Don’t compare me to the Almighty, compare me to the alternative.”

Now Democrats have done just that.

Top Stories
News24 | Joe Biden, 81, pulls out of US presidential race, will serve out term

Top Stories Tamfitronics

Top Stories Tamfitronics US President Joe Biden exits stage left after a podium appearance in Washington. (Mandel NGAN / AFP)

US President Joe Biden exits stage left after a podium appearance in Washington. (Mandel NGAN / AFP)

  • Joe Biden dropped out of the November election race with a statement on Sunday night, SA time.
  • “I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term,” he said in a statement.
  • A short while later, he endorsed VP Kamala Harris to replace him.

US President Joe Biden ended his reelection campaign on Sunday after fellow Democrats lost faith in his mental acuity and ability to beat Donald Trump, leaving the presidential race in uncharted territory.

Biden, in a post on X, said he will remain in his role as president and commander-in-chief until his term ends in January 2025 and will address the nation this week.

“It has been the greatest honor of my life to serve as your President. And while it has been my intention to seek reelection, I believe it is in the best interest of my party and the country for me to stand down and to focus solely on fulfilling my duties as President for the remainder of my term,” Biden wrote.

By dropping his reelection bid, he clears the way for Vice President Kamala Harris to run at the top of the ticket, the first Black woman to do so in the country’s history.

In a separate statement shortly after, he endorsed Harris.

FOLLOW LIVE |Joe Biden is out of the race; endorsements for Kamala Harris start coming in

“My very first decision as the party nominee in 2020 was to pick Kamala Harris as my Vice President,” Biden wrote. “And it’s been the best decision I’ve made. Today I want to offer my full support and endorsement for Kamala to be the nominee of our party this year. Democrats — it’s time to come together and beat Trump. Let’s do this.”

It was unclear whether other senior Democrats would challenge Harris for the party’s nomination, who was widely seen as the pick for many party officials – or whether the party itself would choose to open the field for nominations.

Biden’s announcement follows a wave of public and private pressure from Democratic lawmakers and party officials to quit the race after his shockingly poor performance in a televised debate last month against Republican rival Donald Trump.

This article was updated after publication to reflect Biden’s endorsement of Harris shortly after its first publication.

– Additional reporting by News24

Top Stories
News24 | Monday’s weather: Fine start to the week with some morning fog patches

Top Stories Tamfitronics

Top Stories Tamfitronics Morning frost is forecast in some regions, but fine to cool conditions expected elsewhere. (Schon/Getty Images)

Morning frost is forecast in some regions, but fine to cool conditions expected elsewhere. (Schon/Getty Images)

The start of the week is set to be warm, with most provinces experiencing fine and cool conditions, according to the South African Weather Service.

Gauteng will be fine and cool to warm.

The expected UVB sunburn index is high.

Morning fog patches are expected along the escarpment and Highveld areas of Mpumalanga and Limpopootherwise fine and cool but partly cloudy and warm in the Lowveld and east respectively.

Morning fog patches along the escarpment and Highveld areas, otherwise fine and cool but partly cloudy and warm in the east.

The North West will also be fine and cool to warm.

Fine and cool conditions are expected in theFree State.

In the Northern Capeit will be fine and cold to cool but warm in the north.

The wind along the coast will be moderate to fresh southerly to south-easterly.

Morning fog patches are expected over the interior of the Western Capeotherwise fine and cold to cool.

The wind along the coast will be light and variable along the south coast, but moderate south-easterly in the late afternoon, otherwise fresh to strong southerly to south-easterly and moderating from the afternoon. It will become light to moderate southerly to south-westerly north of Dassen Island from the afternoon.

The expected UVB sunburn index is moderate.

The western half of theEastern Cape will experience morning fog patches in places over the southern interior, otherwise fine and cool.

The wind along the coast will be light north-westerly, becoming easterly from afternoon.

On the eastern half, there will be morning fog patches south of the escarpment, otherwise fine and cool.

The wind along the coast will be light south-westerly.

In KwaZulu-Natalmorning fog patches will be in places over the interior and isolated morning light showers or rain in places along the coast, otherwise fine and cool but warm in the north-east.

The wind along the coast will be moderate to fresh easterly to north-easterly, becoming moderate southerly to south-easterly from the south by late morning

The expected UVB sunburn index is very high.

Top Stories Tamfitronics temps

Monday’s temperatures.

0
YOUR CART
  • No products in the cart.