Kamala Harris: the chance of a lifetime



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The life-changing call for Kamala Harris came through Zoom. It was August and the intense heat of summer on the American East Coast was spreading over the American capital.

The 56-year-old senator from California sat in front of a laptop in her Washington, DC apartment. On the other end of the line, Joe Biden answered. In short, he made it clear to her that he had chosen her as his candidate for the position of vice president.

“Are you ready to go to work?” Biden asked.

When Joe Biden became a senator in 1973, Harris was still in elementary school.

His response was instantaneous: “Oh my God, yes,” Harris exclaimed gleefully. “I am absolutely ready to go to work.”

Now the two of them have done it: after a stressful election campaign and an electoral count that he just wanted to end, Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will take power together in the White House.

Harris’s rise to vice president is one of the most astonishing political careers in years. In the nearly 250-year history of the United States, she is not only the first woman to hold this office, but she will also rule with a president who is nearly 22 years her senior. When Joe Biden became a senator in 1973, Harris was still in elementary school.

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