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The secret history of the 2018 elections in 84 color pages.
I’ll buy it
With the election of Joe Biden, it has also been decided that Kamala Harris will be the next Vice President of the United States. Harris’ election is historic in several ways: For the first time, she will be the vice president of the country, just as she will be the vice president of black and South Asian descent for the first time.
Harris joined the Senate in 2016, having previously served as a prosecutor in California. He also ran for the presidential candidacy, in one of the debates in the summer of 2019 he also attacked Bident with particular harshness, however, he had no chance of a final nomination.
Harris, 55, is the son of immigrant parents, his mother was born in India and his father was born in Jamaica. After his parents’ divorce, Harris was raised by his Hindu mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, who works as a cancer researcher and advocate.
Harris was a student at Howard University, then earned a law degree from the University of California, after which he worked as a civil servant. As early as 2003, she was already a San Francisco district attorney and was elected the first woman and the first black woman to become California’s chief prosecutor. At that time he was already considered one of the emerging talents of the Democratic Party. After two cycles of prosecutors, he became a senator in 2017. During his career as a politician, he gained fame primarily for his tough questions at the hearing of the subsequent judge, Brett Kavanaugh and William Barr, respectively.
The more progressive and left-wing camp in the Democratic Party did not take a good look at Harris’s prosecution record, even if Harris once called himself a progressive prosecutor. After becoming a vice presidential candidate, he repeatedly called for a change in the operation of the police at campaign events and repeatedly spoke of the need to eradicate systemic racism in the judiciary.
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