On July 31, 2024
Opinions

Harris grabs the mantle — what now?

By Angelo Lynn

The tectonic plates of this presidential election are shifting so quickly it’s hard to keep up. With President Biden announcing Sunday, July 21, he was stepping aside and throwing his support to Vice President Kamala Harris, there was a moment of anticipation that Democrats would see a scramble between top contenders for the party’s presidential nomination. But of the half dozen likely contenders, no others stepped forward. 

Party unity in defeating ex-president Trump prevailed and Harris appears to have clinched the nomination well ahead of the convention.

For Democrats, a unified party behind a strong candidate is better than facing a potentially fractious fight. The downside of such a hasty coronation, however, is the missed opportunity to refine some of its talking points with free televised coverage in a debate-like format — an opportunity that would have drawn huge audiences of undecided voters.

In lieu of those debates, there might be another opportunity.

Harris and party leaders could slow the search for a vice-presidential candidate and use the next three weeks before the convention to flesh out the Democratic platform via group interviews with the top VP candidates and Harris. The party could, for example, pick five top issues to discuss in five separate conversations, allowing each of the candidates to elaborate on how the Democratic platform differs from the Republican approach and why it better serves the average voter. 

These conversations, which would still be moderated, would introduce voters to the candidates and help define the issues. The top issues aren’t hard to choose: 

The economy and why America is better off than most other countries, what that means to the average voter, and why we’re on track to tame inflation; 

Abortion and a woman’s right to control her own body; 

Climate change — the opportunities of a green economy versus the catastrophic results of denial; 

Foreign policy and the false allure of isolationism; 

How to manage immigration so it doesn’t overwhelm our lives yet helps the nation grow and be stronger as it has always done throughout American history.

If it’s too complex or cumbersome to include all the VP contenders, Harris could do the same on her own and draw millions of viewers with each topic. That’s in addition, of course, to Harris’s campaign duties and a ramped-up schedule to compare and contrast her youth, vigor, intelligence, and knowledge of the issues to Trump and the party he has made in his orange-glow image.

Harris has a lot of work ahead to ensure American voters get to know who she is, feel comfortable with her, and understand the contrast in leadership and optimism she offers the country. 

It feels new and exciting because it is.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Raising the bar for ethics in Killington

May 23, 2025
Dear Editor, As a candidate for the Killington Select Board, I’m running on a commitment to transparency, accountability, and steady leadership. I believe that trust in local government begins with clear standards and clear enforcement. Killington’s current conflict of interest policy, adopted in 2019, provides a useful foundation. However, it lacks the tools to ensure…

Education transformation bill will gut local education

May 21, 2025
Dear Editor, Editor’s note: This is an open letter directed to the Windsor Southeast Supervisory Union (WSESU) communities dated May 19. Similar letters were sent out by many superintendents and school officials including Sherry Sousa at Mountain Views SU in Woodstock.  As you may know, the Vermont House and the Senate have been working on…

Bill Vines for Killington Select Board

May 21, 2025
Dear Editor, Since I announced my candidacy, many residents have spoken to me about their concerns for Killington. Taxes and education funding, for example, are often mentioned. Not surprisingly, everyone agrees that taxes need to be controlled and education funding needs to be solved. Virtually everyone has spoken to me about how the town is…

Must H.454 be medicine that’s too awful to swallow?

May 21, 2025
By Angelo Lynn Editor’s note: Angelo Lynn is the publisher of the Addison Independent, a sister publication of the Mountain Times.  On Thursday, May 15, the Senate Finance Committee gave H.454, the Legislature’s revised school funding bill, its final review and sent it to the full Senate to vote on this week. House and Senate…