Revision as of 12:14, 18 August 2019 view sourceFdewaele (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers27,462 editsm Reverted 1 edit by 5.29.82.186 (talk) to last revision by El C (TW)Tag: Undo← Previous edit | Revision as of 03:37, 19 August 2019 view source BattleshipGray (talk | contribs)88 edits →Health careNext edit → | ||
Line 334: | Line 334: | ||
=== Health care === | === Health care === | ||
On August 30, 2017, Harris announced at a town hall in Oakland that she would co-sponsor fellow Senator ]' "Medicare for All" bill, supporting ].<ref>{{cite web|last1=Weigel|first1=David|title=Sen. Kamala Harris backs Bernie Sanders's single-payer bill|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2017/08/31/sen-kamala-harris-backs-bernie-sanderss-single-payer-bill/|website=The Washington Post|accessdate=August 31, 2017|date=August 30, 2017}}</ref><ref name="Herndon 2019"/> | On August 30, 2017, Harris announced at a town hall in Oakland that she would co-sponsor fellow Senator ]' "Medicare for All" bill, supporting ].<ref>{{cite web|last1=Weigel|first1=David|title=Sen. Kamala Harris backs Bernie Sanders's single-payer bill|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/powerpost/wp/2017/08/31/sen-kamala-harris-backs-bernie-sanderss-single-payer-bill/|website=The Washington Post|accessdate=August 31, 2017|date=August 30, 2017}}</ref><ref name="Herndon 2019"/> Sen. Harris has stated that "Medicare for All" means all people in the United States, including illegal immigrants.<ref>https://nypost.com/2019/06/28/republicans-pounce-on-dems-plan-to-give-health-insurance-to-illegal-immigrants/</ref> | ||
In April 2018, Harris was one of ten senators to sponsor the Choose Medicare Act, an expanded public option for health insurance that also increased ObamaCare subsidies and rendered individuals with higher income levels eligible for its assistance.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/383764-dem-senators-unveil-expanded-public-option-for-health-insurance|title=Dem senators unveil expanded public option for health insurance|date=April 18, 2018|newspaper=The Hill}}</ref> | In April 2018, Harris was one of ten senators to sponsor the Choose Medicare Act, an expanded public option for health insurance that also increased ObamaCare subsidies and rendered individuals with higher income levels eligible for its assistance.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/383764-dem-senators-unveil-expanded-public-option-for-health-insurance|title=Dem senators unveil expanded public option for health insurance|date=April 18, 2018|newspaper=The Hill}}</ref> |
Revision as of 03:37, 19 August 2019
United States Senator from California
Kamala Harris | |
---|---|
United States Senator from California | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 3, 2017Serving with Dianne Feinstein | |
Preceded by | Barbara Boxer |
32nd Attorney General of California | |
In office January 3, 2011 – January 3, 2017 | |
Governor | Jerry Brown |
Preceded by | Jerry Brown |
Succeeded by | Xavier Becerra |
27th District Attorney of San Francisco | |
In office January 8, 2004 – January 3, 2011 | |
Preceded by | Terence Hallinan |
Succeeded by | George Gascón |
Personal details | |
Born | Kamala Devi Harris (1964-10-20) October 20, 1964 (age 60) Oakland, California, U.S. |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse |
Douglas Emhoff (m. 2014) |
Parent(s) | Shyamala Gopalan (mother) Donald Harris (father) |
Relatives | Maya Harris (sister) |
Education | Howard University (BA) University of California, Hastings (JD) |
Signature | |
Website | Senate website |
| ||
---|---|---|
Personal
27th District Attorney of San Francisco 32nd Attorney General of California U.S. Senator from California 49th Vice President of the United States Incumbent
Vice presidential campaigns Presidential campaigns |
||
Kamala Devi Harris (/ˈkɑːmələ/ KAH-mə-lə; born October 20, 1964) is an American lawyer and politician serving as the junior United States Senator from California since 2017. A member of the Democratic Party, she previously served as the 27th District Attorney of San Francisco from 2004 to 2011 and 32nd Attorney General of California from 2011 until 2017. She is a candidate for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States in the 2020 election.
Harris was born in Oakland, California and is a graduate of Howard University and University of California, Hastings College of the Law. In the 1990s, she worked in the San Francisco District Attorney's Office and the City Attorney of San Francisco's office. In 2004, she was elected District Attorney of San Francisco.
Harris won the election as California's Attorney General in 2010 and was reelected in 2014 by a wide margin. On November 8, 2016, she defeated Loretta Sanchez in the 2016 Senate election to succeed outgoing Senator Barbara Boxer, becoming California's third female U.S. Senator, and the first of Jamaican or Indian ancestry. Since becoming a Senator, she has supported single-payer healthcare, federal descheduling of cannabis, support for sanctuary cities, the DREAM Act, and lowering the tax burden for the working and middle classes while raising taxes on corporations and the wealthiest one percent of Americans.
Early life and education
Kamala Harris was born on October 20, 1964 in Oakland, California to a Tamil Indian mother and a Jamaican father. Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, was a breast-cancer scientist who immigrated to the United States from Madras (present-day Chennai), India in 1960. She insisted on giving her daughters Sanskrit names derived from Hindu mythology to help preserve their cultural identity. Her father, Donald Harris, is a Stanford University economics professor who emigrated from Jamaica in 1961 for graduate study in economics at University of California, Berkeley. Recalling the lives of his grandmothers, Donald Harris wrote that one was related to a plantation and slave owner while the other had unknown ancestry. She identifies as Indian and black.
Harris's family lived in Berkeley, California, where both of her parents attended graduate school. She was close to her maternal grandfather, P. V. Gopalan, an Indian diplomat. As a child, she often visited her extended family in the Besant Nagar neighborhood of Chennai, Tamil Nadu. She grew up going to both a Baptist black church and a Hindu temple. She has one younger sister, Maya Harris. They both sang in a Baptist choir.
Harris began kindergarten during the second year of Berkeley's school desegregation busing program, which pioneered the extensive use of busing to bring racial balance to each of the city's public schools; a bus took her to a school which two years earlier had been 95% white. Her parents divorced when she was seven, and her mother was granted custody of the children. After the divorce, when Harris was 12, her mother moved with the children to Montreal, Quebec, Canada, where Shyamala accepted a position doing research at Jewish General Hospital and teaching at McGill University.
As a teenager she co-founded a small dance troupe of six dancers that played at community center and fundraisers. At Westmount High School in Westmount, Quebec, she was a popular student.
After graduating in 1981, Harris majored in political science and economics at Howard University in Washington, D.C. At Howard, she was elected to the liberal-arts student council as freshman class representative, was a member of the debate team, and joined the Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority.
Harris returned to California, where she earned her Juris Doctor (J.D.) from the University of California, Hastings College of the Law in 1989. She was admitted to the State Bar of California in 1990.
Early career
Main article: Electoral history of Kamala HarrisHarris served as a deputy district attorney in Alameda County, California, from 1990 to 1998. She sought a career in law enforcement because she wanted to be "at the table where decisions are made". During this time she was appointed to several state boards. In 2000, San Francisco's elected City Attorney, Louise Renne, recruited Harris to join her office, where she was chief of the Community and Neighborhood Division, which oversees civil code enforcement matters.
District Attorney of San Francisco
Harris defeated two-term incumbent Terence Hallinan in the 2003 election to become District Attorney of the City and County of San Francisco. Her excellent connections to the city's high society, made in part through her 1990s relationship with the influential state politician Willie Brown, were instrumental to her success and her later career in California.
In April 2004, San Francisco Police Department Officer Isaac Espinoza was shot and killed in the line of duty. Three days later, Harris announced she would not seek the death penalty, angering the San Francisco Police Officers Association. During Espinoza's funeral at St. Mary's Cathedral, U.S. Senator and former San Francisco mayor Dianne Feinstein rose to the pulpit and called on Harris, who was sitting in the front pew, to secure the death penalty, prompting a standing ovation from the 2,000 uniformed police officers in attendance. Harris still refused. Espinoza's killer was convicted of the murder and sentenced to life in prison.
In 2004, as district attorney, Harris started the Back On Track initiative, a reentry program. Initiative participants (who are nonviolent, first-time drug offenders whose crimes were not weapon- or gang-related) plead guilty in exchange for a deferral of sentencing and regular appearances before a judge over a year-long period. Participants who succeed in obtaining a high-school-equivalency diploma, maintaining steady employment, taking parenting classes, and passing drug tests have their records cleared. Over eight years, the program produced fewer than 300 graduates, but achieved a very low recidivism rate. In 2009, a state law (the Back on Track Reentry Act, Assembly Bill 750) was enacted, encouraging other counties to start programs around a similar model. Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the bill into law. The program met some controversy because it initially included illegal immigrants, including one, Alexander Izaguirre, who was later arrested for assault. She later said allowing persons not eligible to work in the United States was a mistake, and modified the program to bar anyone who could not legally be employed in the United States.
Harris was re-elected in 2007 when she ran unopposed. A 2008 New York Times article listing women who might have the potential to become president of the United States listed then-District Attorney Harris, suggesting she had a reputation as a "tough fighter."
In 2009, Harris's book Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor's Plan to Make Us Safer was published by Chronicle Books. In the book, she touted her Back On Track initiative and argued for what she referred to as "a smarter approach when it comes to combating nonviolent crime" emphasizing crime prevention, truancy prevention, and the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder in children. The book discusses a series of "myths" surrounding the criminal justice system and presents proposals to reduce and prevent crime. Recognized by The Los Angeles Daily Journal as one of the top 100 lawyers in California, she served on the board of the California District Attorneys Association and was vice president of the National District Attorneys Association.
In 2013, the San Francisco Weekly reported that the San Francisco Police Department and Harris's office shielded Abraham H. Guerra Sr., a high-ranking member of the Norteño gang, from returning to prison due to parole violations because Guerra was an informant who provided authorities with information.
Violent crimes and conviction rate
While Harris was the San Francisco District Attorney, the overall felony conviction rate rose from 52% in 2003 to 67% in 2006, the highest in a decade; there was an 85% conviction rate for homicides, and convictions of drug dealers increased from 56% in 2003 to 74% in 2006. While these statistics represent only trial convictions, she also closed many cases via plea bargains. When she took office, she took a special interest in clearing part of the murder caseload from the previous administration. She stated that the records from that administration were less than ideal, and worked to get convictions on what she could. Out of the 73 homicide cases backlogged, 32 cases took deals for lesser charges such as manslaughter or took pleas to other crimes such as assault or burglary while the murder charges were dismissed.
In 2004, Harris pushed for higher bail for criminal defendants involved in gun-related crimes. She argued at the time that low bail encouraged outsiders to commit crimes in San Francisco. As U.S. Senator in 2017, she introduced legislation to "reform or replace the practice of money bail."
Officers within the SFPD credited Harris with tightening loopholes in bail and drug programs that defendants had used in the past. They also accused her of being too deliberate in her prosecution of murder suspects. Additionally, in 2009, San Francisco prosecutors won a lower percentage of their felony jury trials than their counterparts at district attorneys' offices covering the 10 largest cities in California, according to data on case outcomes compiled by officials at the San Francisco Superior Court as well as by other county courts and prosecutors. (Officials in Sacramento, the sixth-largest city in California, did not provide data.) Her at-trial felony conviction rate that year was 76%, down 12 points from the previous year. The then-most recent recorded statewide average was 83%, according to statistics from the California Judicial Council. In a small sample, a report computed that the conviction rate for felony trials in San Francisco County in the first three months of 2010 was 53%. San Francisco has historically had one of the lowest conviction rates in the state; the county is known for a defendant-friendly jury pool.
In 2012, Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo ruled that San Francisco District Attorney Harris's office violated defendants' rights by hiding damaging information about a police crime lab technician, and was indifferent to demands that it account for its failings.
Hate crimes and civil rights
As San Francisco District Attorney, Harris created a special Hate Crimes Unit, focusing on hate crimes against LGBT children and teens in schools. She convened a national conference to confront the "gay-transgender panic defense", which has been used to justify violent hate crimes. She supports same-sex marriage in California and opposed both Proposition 22 and Proposition 8.
In 2004, The National Urban League honored Harris as a "Woman of Power". In 2005, she received the Thurgood Marshall Award from the National Black Prosecutors Association. In her campaign for California Attorney General, she received the endorsements of many groups including EMILY's List, California Legislative Black Caucus, Asian American Action Fund, Black Women Organized for Political Action, the National Women's Political Caucus, Mexican American Bar Association, and South Asians for Opportunity.
Attorney General of California
2010 election
Main article: 2010 California Attorney General electionOn November 12, 2008, Harris announced her candidacy for California Attorney General. Both of California's United States Senators, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, as well as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, endorsed her during the Democratic Party primary. In the June 8, 2010, primary, she was nominated with 33.6% of the vote, defeating Alberto Torrico (who received 15.6% of the vote) and Chris Kelly (who received 15.5%).
In her campaign for California Attorney General, Harris received the endorsements of United Farm Workers cofounder Dolores Huerta, United Educators of San Francisco, and San Francisco Firefighters Local 798. She also received the endorsement of Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of Los Angeles. In the general election, she faced Los Angeles County District Attorney Steve Cooley. On election night, November 2, 2010, Cooley prematurely declared victory, but many ballots remained uncounted. On November 24, as the count advanced, Harris was leading by more than 55,000 votes, and Cooley conceded. On January 3, 2011, she became the first female, Jamaican-American, and Indian-American attorney general in California.
2014 election
Main article: 2014 California Attorney General electionHarris announced her intention to run for re-election in February 2014 and filed paperwork to run on February 12. According to the office of California Secretary of State Debra Bowen, Harris had raised the money for her campaign during the previous year in 2013. The Sacramento Bee, Los Angeles Daily News, and Los Angeles Times endorsed her for reelection.
On November 4, 2014, Harris was re-elected against Republican Ronald Gold.
Significant cases and policies
Housing
When Harris took office in 2011, California was still reeling from the effects of the subprime mortgage crisis. In 2012, she participated in the National Mortgage Settlement against five banks, securing $12 billion of debt reduction for the state's homeowners and $26 billion overall.
She introduced the California Homeowner's Bill of Rights in the California State Legislature, a set of laws which took effect on January 1, 2013, banning the practices of "dual-tracking" (processing a modification and foreclosure at the same time) and robo-signing, and provided homeowners with a single point of contact at their lending institution. It also gave the California Attorney General more power to investigate and prosecute financial fraud and to convene special grand juries to prosecute multi-county crimes instead of prosecuting a single crime county by county.
Prison conditions and sentencing reform
After the United States Supreme Court in Brown v. Plata (2011) declared California's prisons so overcrowded they inflicted cruel and unusual punishment, Harris fought federal court supervision, explaining "I have a client, and I don't get to choose my client." After California failed to fully implement the court's order to reduce crowding, and was ordered to implement new parole programs, the State of California appealed the decision, and in court filings the AG's office argued that if forced to release these inmates early, prisons would lose an important source of labor, such as for fighting wildfires. Prisoners in California earn between 8 and 37 cents per hour in maintenance and kitchen jobs; prisoner firefighters receive higher pay, at $1 per hour. She later backed away from her office's argument in the prison-litigation case, telling the website ThinkProgress: "The way that argument played out in court does not reflect my priorities... The idea that we incarcerate people to have indentured servants is one of the worst possible perceptions. I feel very strongly about that. It evokes images of chain gangs."
Harris refused to take any position on criminal sentencing-reform initiatives Proposition 36 (2012) and Proposition 47 (2014), arguing it would be improper because her office prepares the ballot booklets. Former California Attorney General John Van de Kamp considered her explanation "baloney."
Prosecuting financial crimes
Harris has prosecuted many financial crimes, such as predatory lending. In 2011, while serving as Attorney General of California, she created the Mortgage Fraud Strike Force which had a mandate to eliminate mortgage foreclosure fraud. The task force has been criticized for not filing as many foreclosure cases as in states with smaller populations.
In 2013, Harris did not prosecute Steve Mnuchin's bank OneWest despite evidence "suggestive of widespread misconduct" according to a leaked memo from the Department of Justice. In 2017, she said that her office's decision not to prosecute Mnuchin was based on "following the facts and the evidence...like any other case". In 2016, Mnuchin donated $2,000 to her campaign, making her the only 2016 Senate Democratic candidate to get cash from Mnuchin, but as senator, she voted against the confirmation of Mnuchin as Secretary of the Treasury.
Mobile-app user privacy
In 2012, Harris sent a letter to 100 mobile-app developers, asking them to comply with California law with respect to privacy issues. If any developer of an application that could be used by a Californian does not display a privacy policy statement when the application is installed, California law is broken, with a possible fine of $2500 for every download. The law affects any developer anywhere in the world if the app is used by a Californian.
Michelle-Lael Norsworthy case
In February 2014, Michelle-Lael Norsworthy, a transgender woman incarcerated at California's Mule Creek State Prison, filed a federal lawsuit based on the state's failure to provide her with what she argued was medically necessary sex reassignment surgery (SRS). In April 2015, a federal judge ordered the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR) to provide Norsworthy with SRS, finding that prison officials had been "deliberately indifferent to her serious medical need." Harris, representing CDCR, challenged the order in the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. She argued that "Norsworthy has been receiving hormone therapy for her gender dysphoria since 2000, and continues to receive hormone therapy and other forms of treatment" and that "there is no evidence that Norsworthy is in serious, immediate physical or emotional danger."
In August 2015, while the state's appeal was pending, Norsworthy was released on parole, obviating the state's duty to provide her with inmate medical care and rendering the case moot. Harris maintained that the parole review process was independent of Norsworthy's legal case against CDCR, although the Ninth Circuit, in its opinion, said it was possible that Norsworthy's release on parole, ahead of her scheduled SRS, may have been influenced by CDCR officials.
Bureau of Children's Justice
On February 12, 2015, Harris announced that she would start a new agency called the Bureau of Children's Justice. The bureau would work on issues such as foster care, the juvenile justice system, school truancy, and childhood trauma. She appointed special assistant attorney general Jill Habig to head the agency.
County prosecutors' misconduct
In 2015, Harris defended convictions obtained by county prosecutors who had inserted a false confession into an interrogation transcript, committed perjury, and withheld evidence. Federal appeals court Judge Alex Kozinski threw out the convictions, telling lawyers, "Talk to the attorney general and make sure she understands the gravity of the situation."
In March 2015, a California superior courts judge ordered Harris to take over a criminal case after Orange County District Attorney Tony Rackauckas was revealed to have illegally employed jailhouse informants and concealed evidence. She refused, appealing the order and defending Rackauckas.
Harris appealed the dismissal of an indictment when it was discovered a Kern County prosecutor perjured in submitting a falsified confession as court evidence. In the case, she argued that only abject physical brutality would warrant a finding of prosecutorial misconduct and the dismissal of an indictment, and that perjury alone was not enough.
Oil and gas companies
After an oil spill from a pipeline caused damage to the California coastline in May 2015, Harris toured the coastline and directed her office's resources and attorneys to investigate possible criminal violations. The investigations led to dozens of indictments. In June 2016, she issued subpoenas to Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell, Phillips 66, Valero Energy, and Tesoro relating to an investigation into possible price-fixing.
Mitrice Richardson case
Main article: Death of Mitrice RichardsonMitrice Richardson was a 24-year-old African American woman who was released from the Los Angeles County Sheriff Department in the middle of the night without any means of fending for herself. Her body was later found in an isolated canyon, leaving the family with many unanswered questions. In 2016, the Attorney General opened a criminal investigation into the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's handling of the Mitrice Richardson case. The AG's Office had originally declined the request of the Richardson family to investigate the case, but reversed course after the family and supporters submitted almost 500 pages of evidence to Harris's office in the hope of prompting an investigation. In December 2016, the California Attorney General's Office closed the investigation, concluding that there was insufficient evidence to support criminal prosecution of anyone involved in the handling of the Richardson case.
Backpage cases
In October 2016, Harris announced the arrest of Backpage CEO Carl Ferrer on felony charges of pimping a minor, pimping, and conspiracy to commit pimping. The arrest warrant alleged that 99% of Backpage's revenue was directly attributable to prostitution-related ads, many of which involved victims of sex trafficking, including children under the age of 18.
The pimping charge against Ferrer was dismissed by the California courts in 2016 on the grounds of Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, but in 2018 Ferrer ultimately pleaded guilty in California to money laundering and agreed to give evidence against the former co-owners of Backpage, Mike Lacey and Jim Larkin. Ferrer simultaneously pleaded guilty to charges of money laundering and conspiracy to facilitate prostitution in Texas state court and Arizona federal court.
In January 2017, following government pressure, Backpage announced that it was removing its adult section from all of its sites in the United States. Harris welcomed the move, saying "I look forward to them shutting down completely." The investigations continued after she became a senator and in April 2018, Backpage and affiliated sites were seized by federal law enforcement around the same time as Ferrer's guilty plea.
Supreme Court and U.S. Attorney General speculation
During Obama's presidency, Harris was mentioned as a possible nominee for the United States Supreme Court or U.S. Attorney General, but she was not nominated to either office.
U.S. Senate
2016 election
Main article: 2016 United States Senate election in CaliforniaAfter Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) announced her intention to retire from the United States Senate at the end of her term in 2016, after which she would have served as California's junior senator for 24 years, Harris was the first candidate to declare her intention to run for Boxer's senate seat. Media outlets reported that she would run for senate on the same day that Gavin Newsom, California's Lieutenant Governor and a close political ally of Harris, announced he would not seek to succeed Boxer. She officially announced the launch of her campaign on January 13, 2015.
After holding a flurry of fundraisers in both California and Washington, D.C., Harris was reported to have raised $2.5 million for her campaign. In December, the National Journal released a story describing her use of funds on hotels, the laying off of campaign staff and the inordinate totals, which had contributed to her money on hand being closer to that of another candidate, Loretta Sanchez, who had $1.6 million.
Harris was a frontrunner from the beginning of her campaign. In January 2015, weeks after she announced her campaign, a survey by Public Policy Polling showed her leading by 41% to former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa's 16%, who was seen as a potential candidate. In May, a Field Poll was released, showing that although 58% of likely voters did not have a favored candidate, she was most preferred out of the field, with 19%. October saw the release of a Field Poll with her at 30%, and fellow Democratic candidate Loretta Sanchez in second place at 17%. Harris had increased her support by 11% since the Field Poll in May despite being noted by The Sacramento Bee as not being active in campaigning since appearing at the California Democratic Party's convention.
In late February 2016, the California Democratic Party voted at its state convention to endorse Harris, who received 78% of the vote – 18% more than the 60% needed to secure the endorsement. The party endorsement did not secure any candidate a place in the general election, as all candidates would participate in one primary election in June, after which the top two candidates from any party would advance to the general election. She participated in debates with the other major candidates for the seat, her front-runner status causing her to be at the center of discussion. Governor Jerry Brown endorsed her on May 23. She came in first place on primary day, June 7, with 40% of the votes, entering a runoff with fellow Democratic candidate Loretta Sanchez. On July 19, President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden endorsed Harris.
In the June 2016 primary election, with results detailed at the county level, Harris won 48 of 58 counties. She won seven counties with more than 50% of the vote: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Cruz, and Sonoma. The highest percentage was San Francisco, with 70.4% of the vote. She faced Congresswoman Loretta Sanchez, also a Democrat, in the general election. This assured that the seat would stay in Democratic hands; it was the first time a Republican did not appear in a general election for the Senate since California began directly electing senators in 1914.
In the November 2016 election, Harris defeated Sanchez with 62 percent of the vote, carrying all but four counties. Following her victory, she promised to protect immigrants from the policies of President-elect Donald Trump.
Following her election to the United States Senate, Harris announced her intention to remain California's Attorney General through the end of 2016 and resign shortly before being sworn in as Senator on January 3, 2017. Governor Jerry Brown announced his intention to nominate Congressman Xavier Becerra as her successor.
Tenure
On January 21, 2017, a day after President Trump was sworn into office, Harris called the message of Trump's inaugural address "dark" when speaking during the Women's March on Washington. On January 28, after Trump signed Executive Order 13769, barring citizens from several Muslim-majority countries from entering the US for 90 days, she condemned the order and was one of many to describe it as a "Muslim ban". When John F. Kelly was White House Chief of Staff, she called him at home to gather information and push back against the contentious executive order.
In early February, Harris spoke in opposition to Trump's cabinet picks Betsy DeVos, for Secretary of Education, and Jeff Sessions, for United States Attorney General. Later that month, in her first speech on the senate floor, she spent 12 minutes critiquing Trump's immigration policies. In early March, she called on Attorney General Sessions to resign, after it was reported that Sessions spoke twice with Russian Ambassador to the United States Sergey Kislyak. On March 14, she claimed repealing the Affordable Care Act would send the message of health care's being a "privilege" rather than a "civil right".
In a May 2017 interview, Harris criticized Republican representative Raul Labrador for saying that no one dies due to lack of access to health care.
On June 7, 2017, Harris garnered media attention for her questioning of Rod Rosenstein, the Deputy Attorney General, over the role he played in the May 2017 firing of James Comey, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The prosecutorial nature of her questioning caused Senator John McCain, an ex officio member of the Intelligence Committee, and Senator Richard Burr, the committee chairman, to interrupt her and request that she be more respectful of the witness; other Democrats on the committee pointed out that they had asked similarly tough questions, but had not been interrupted. On June 13, she questioned Jeff Sessions, the Attorney General, on the same topic; She was again interrupted by McCain and Burr. Sessions stated that her mode of questioning "makes me nervous"; other Democratic members of the committee again pointed out that she was the only senator whose questioning was interrupted with an admonishment from the chairman. Burr's singling out of Harris sparked suggestion in the news media that his behavior was sexist, with commentators arguing that Burr would not treat a male Senate colleague in a similar manner. In addition, when CNN pundit Jason Miller described her as "hysterical", Kirsten Powers, who was taking part in the same on-air segment, told Miller that his use of the term to describe Harris was sexist, and that he would not describe male senators in the same manner.
In July 2017, Harris voted in favor of the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act that grouped together sanctions against Iran, Russia and North Korea.
In a January 2018 hearing, Harris questioned Homeland Security Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen for favoring Norwegian immigrants over others and claiming to be unaware that Norway is a predominantly white country.
In an April 2018 hearing, Harris questioned Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg for Facebook's misuse of users' data.
In response to the administration's family separation policy, Harris visited one of the detention facilities near the border in June 2018.
In the September and October 2018 Brett Kavanaugh Supreme Court confirmation hearings, Harris participated in questioning the FBI Director's limited scope of the investigation on Kavanaugh.
Harris was one of the targets of the October 2018 United States mail bombing attempts.
In February 2019, Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., tweeted, "It's all about the Benjamins baby" in reference to American politicians' support for Israel and invoked the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). A number of Democratic leaders – including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi – condemned the tweet, which was interpreted as implying that money was fueling American politicians' support of Israel. Harris defended Ilhan Omar, saying that "We should be having a sound, respectful discussion about policy. You can both support Israel and be loyal to our country. I also believe there is a difference between criticism of policy or political leaders, and anti-Semitism."
Committee assignments
- Committee on the Budget
- Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
- Select Committee on Intelligence
- Committee on the Judiciary
Source: Los Angeles Times
Caucus memberships
- Congressional Black Caucus
- Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus
- Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues
2020 presidential campaign
Main article: Kamala Harris 2020 presidential campaignHarris had been considered a top contender and potential frontrunner for the 2020 Democratic nomination for President. In June 2018, she was quoted as "not ruling it out". As of July 2018, she was spending more on Facebook advertising than any other senator. In July 2018, it was announced that she would publish a memoir, another sign of a possible run. She also stumped for candidates in Michigan, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina.
On January 21, 2019, Harris officially announced her candidacy for President of the United States in the 2020 United States presidential election. In the first 24 hours after her candidacy announcement, she tied a record set by Bernie Sanders in 2016 for the most donations raised in the day following announcement. However, Sanders later broke this record after announcing his own 2020 presidential campaign.
Over 20,000 people attended her formal campaign launch event in her hometown of Oakland, California on January 27, according to a police estimate.
Harris's support rose by between 6–9 points in polls following the first Democratic presidential debate.
Political positions
Abortion
Since her election to the Senate, Harris has maintained a 100% rating by the abortion rights advocacy group Planned Parenthood Action Fund and a 0% rating by the anti-abortion group National Right to Life Committee.
Campaign finance
Harris's 2020 campaign has disavowed most corporate donations, and has committed to rejecting money from corporate political action committees for her presidential campaign. Harris, along with candidates Cory Booker, Julian Castro, Tulsi Gabbard, Kirsten Gillibrand, Amy Klobuchar, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Marianne Williamson, has explicitly discouraged single-candidate super PACs from operating on her behalf, though she cannot prevent them from doing so. In 2017, Harris met with prominent Democratic Party donors in The Hamptons. For her 2020 campaign, Harris is relying on both small and large individual donors. After the FEC released donation disclosures in April 2019, The Intercept noted "the Harris campaign received the most registered lobbyist donations of any Democratic presidential campaign that has said it would not take the cash." In the first quarter of 2019, 37% of Harris's donations came from small donors (donations of less than $200) and 63% of her donations came from large donors (donations of $200 or more).
Cannabis
Harris did not initially support the legalization of recreational marijuana, but later moved to support legalization. In 2010, while campaigning for Attorney General of California, she opposed Proposition 19, the first failed attempt to legalize recreational marijuana in California, on the grounds that selling drugs harms communities. In 2015, she called for an end on the federal prohibition of medical marijuana.
In May 2018, Harris announced she would co-sponsor the Marijuana Justice Act, which Senator Cory Booker introduced in August 2017. The legislation would eliminate marijuana's status as a Schedule I drug under the Controlled Substance Act. The move would also require federal courts to automatically expunge earlier federal marijuana convictions related to use or possession and would establish a grant program aimed at incentivizing the expungement and sealing of state convictions for marijuana possession.
Death penalty
Harris is opposed to the death penalty, but has said that she would review each case individually. Her position was questioned in April 2004, when SFPD Officer Isaac Espinoza was murdered in the Bayview district. She announced that she would not seek the death penalty for the man accused of his killing. The decision evoked protests from the San Francisco Police Officers Association, Senator Dianne Feinstein, and others. Those who supported her decision not to seek the death penalty included San Francisco Supervisors Tom Ammiano and Sophie Maxwell, in whose district the murder occurred. The jury found the convicted killer, David Hill, guilty of second-degree murder, although the prosecutor, Harry Dorfman, had sought a first-degree murder conviction. The defense had argued that Hill thought Espinoza was a member of a rival gang, and that the murder was not premeditated. Hill was given the maximum sentence for the conviction, life without the possibility of parole.
Harris's position against the death penalty was tested again in the case of Edwin Ramos, an illegal immigrant and alleged MS-13 gang member who was accused of murdering Tony Bologna and his sons Michael and Matthew. On September 10, 2009, she announced she would seek life in prison without the possibility of parole rather than the death penalty in the Ramos case.
Harris has expressed the belief that life without possibility of parole is a better, and more cost-effective, punishment. According to the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice, the death penalty costs $137 million per year. If the system were changed to life without possibility of parole, the annual costs would be approximately $12 million per year. She noted that the resulting surplus could put 1,000 more police officers into service in San Francisco alone.
When in 2014, U.S. District Judge Cormac J. Carney declared capital punishment in California unconstitutional, Harris appealed the case.
On July 31, 2019, following Attorney General William Barr announcing that the United States federal government would resume the use of the death penalty for the first time in over twenty years, Harris was a cosponsor of a bill banning the death penalty.
Disaster relief
In August 2018, Harris was one of eight senators to sign a letter to the Federal Emergency Management Agency charging the agency with not assisting displaced homeowners in Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria under the Individuals and Households program (IHP) at "alarming rates."
Education
Harris has argued for treating "habitual and chronic truancy" among children in elementary school as a crime committed by the parents of truant children. She argues that there is a direct connection between habitual truancy in elementary school and crime later in life. She has received the endorsement of the California Federation of Teachers.
Harris opposed California's ban on affirmative action. She asked the Supreme Court to "reaffirm its decision that public colleges and universities may consider race as one factor in admissions decisions." Harris filed legal papers in the Supreme Court case supporting race as an admissions factor at the University of Texas. She also filed papers supporting affirmative action in a different Supreme Court case involving the University of Michigan.
Harris supports busing for desegregation of public schools, saying that "the schools of America are as segregated, if not more segregated, today than when I was in elementary school." Harris views busing as an option to be considered by school districts, rather than the responsibility of the federal government.
Election security
On December 21, 2017, Harris was one of six senators to introduce the "Secure Elections Act", legislation authorizing block grants for states that would update outdated voting technology. The act would also create a program for an independent panel of experts to develop cybersecurity guidelines for election systems that states could adopt if they choose, along with offering states resources to implement the recommendations.
Environment
During her time as San Francisco District Attorney, Harris created the Environmental Justice Unit in the San Francisco District Attorney's Office and prosecuted several industries and individuals for pollution, most notably U-Haul, Alameda Publishing Corporation, and the Cosco Busan oil spill. She also advocated for strong enforcement of environmental protection laws.
In October 2017, Harris was one of nineteen senators to sign a letter to Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency Scott Pruitt questioning Pruitt's decision to repeal the Clean Power Plan, asserting that the repeal's proposal used "mathematical sleights of hand to over-state the costs of industry compliance with the 2015 Rule and understate the benefits that will be lost if the 2017 repeal is finalized" and science denying and math fabricating would fail to "satisfy the requirements of the law, nor will it slow the increase in frequency and intensity of extreme weather events, the inexorable rise in sea levels, or the other dire effects of global warming that our planet is already experiencing."
In September 2018, Harris was one of eight senators to sponsor the Climate Risk Disclosure Act, a bill described by cosponsor Elizabeth Warren as using "market forces to speed up the transition from fossil fuels to cleaner energy – reducing the odds of an environmental and financial disaster without spending a dime of taxpayer money." She stated that her goal would be achieving 100% of U.S. electricity from renewable energy sources, and that she supports a Green New Deal, an idea made popular by first term Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, because "climate change is an existential threat to all of us."
In November 2018, Harris was one of 25 Democratic senators to cosponsor a resolution specifying key findings of the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change report and National Climate Assessment. The resolution affirmed the senators' acceptance of the findings and their support for bold action toward addressing climate change.
On July 29, 2019, Harris and Ocasio-Cortez introduced the Climate Equity Act, a bill that would lay out steps for Congress and the White House on how to go about guaranteeing policies that composed "a future Green New Deal protect the health and economic wellbeing of all Americans for generations to come." Referring to climate change as "an existential threat", Harris noted cutting emissions and ending American reliance on fossil fuels were not enough and cited the need "that communities already contending with unsafe drinking water, toxic air, and lack of economic opportunity are not left behind."
Foreign policy
In April 2017, responding to the Khan Shaykhun chemical attack, Harris charged Syrian president Bashar al-Assad with attacking Syrian children, and stated "the clear fact that president Assad is not only a ruthless dictator brutalizing his own people – he is a war criminal the international community cannot ignore." She called on President Trump to work with Congress on his administration's "lack of clear objectives in Syria and articulate a detailed strategy and path forward in partnership with our allies."
In 2017, Harris gave a public address to AIPAC attendees. She said: "I believe Israel should never be a partisan issue, and as long as I'm a United States senator, I will do everything in my power to ensure broad and bipartisan support for Israel's security and right to self-defense." She has opposed the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement targeting Israel. She was a co-sponsor of a Senate resolution expressing objection to the UN Security Council Resolution 2334, which condemned Israeli settlement building in the occupied Palestinian territories as a violation of international law. At the AIPAC conference, she said that "the first resolution I co-sponsored as a United States senator was to combat anti-Israel bias at the United Nations". She also supported a Senate resolution celebrating the 50th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem. In late 2017, she traveled to Israel, where she met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
In October 2017, Harris condemned the genocide of the Rohingya Muslim minority in Myanmar and called for a stronger response to the crisis.
In February 2018, Harris was one of 18 Democratic senators to sign a letter to Trump stating that he lacked the authority to launch a preemptive strike against North Korea without authorization from Congress. The letter stated: "Without congressional authority, a preventative or preemptive U.S. military strike would lack either a constitutional basis or legal authority."
In 2018, after Trump announced the United States was withdrawing from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, Harris released a statement saying the decision "jeopardizes our national security and isolates us from our closest allies" while calling the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action "the best existing tool we have to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons and avoid a disastrous military conflict in the Middle East." In late 2018, she voted to withdraw U.S. military aid for Saudi Arabia's war in Yemen. She also backed a resolution blaming Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman for the murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Arabian consulate in Istanbul.
Harris supported the Iran nuclear deal to prevent Iran from acquiring weapons of mass destruction. In December 2018, after Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced the Trump administration was suspending its obligations in the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in 60 days in the event that Russia continued to violate the treaty, she was one of 26 senators to sign a letter expressing concern over the administration "now abandoning generations of bipartisan U.S. leadership around the paired goals of reducing the global role and number of nuclear weapons and ensuring strategic stability with America's nuclear-armed adversaries" and calling on Trump to continue arms negotiations.
Harris voted in favor of a $675 billion defense budget bill for the 2019. She said that North Korea is "one of the most serious security threats". In February 2019, after former Acting FBI Director Andrew McCabe claimed that President Trump believed the claims of President of Russia Vladimir Putin over U.S. intelligence agencies' reports on the subject of North Korea's missile capabilities, she told reporters, "The idea that the president of the U.S. would take the word of the head of Russia over the intel community is the height of irresponsibility and shameful."
Guns
Harris earned an "F" rating from the National Rifle Association for her consistent efforts supporting gun control. While serving as district attorney in San Francisco Harris, along with other district attorneys, filed an amicus brief in District of Columbia v. Heller arguing that the Washington, D.C. gun law at issue did not violate the Second Amendment. In her second term as district attorney, she said that getting guns off the streets was a priority.
During her run for Senate, Harris was endorsed by former U.S. Representative Gabby Giffords, who had been shot in Tucson in 2011. She was also endorsed by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.
In response to the 2017 Las Vegas shooting, Harris supported the call for more gun control. Saying that she believed that thoughts and prayers are inadequate answers to the shooting, she stated that "...we must also commit ourselves to action. Another moment of silence won't suffice."
On August 14, 2019, Harris unveiled a plan that would address domestic terrorism while prioritizing increasing the difficulty for suspected individuals to either obtain or keep firearms through the formation of domestic terrorism prevention orders meant to empower law enforcement officers and family members with the ability to petition federal court for a temporary restriction on a person’s access to firearms in the event that they "exhibit clear evidence of dangerousness." Harris stated that in the US "loaded guns should not be a few clicks away for any domestic terrorist with a laptop or smartphone” and cited the "need to take action to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people and stop violent, hate-fueled attacks before they happen."
Harris owns a gun for "personal safety", as she was a career prosecutor.
Health care
On August 30, 2017, Harris announced at a town hall in Oakland that she would co-sponsor fellow Senator Bernie Sanders' "Medicare for All" bill, supporting single-payer healthcare. Sen. Harris has stated that "Medicare for All" means all people in the United States, including illegal immigrants.
In April 2018, Harris was one of ten senators to sponsor the Choose Medicare Act, an expanded public option for health insurance that also increased ObamaCare subsidies and rendered individuals with higher income levels eligible for its assistance.
In December 2018, Harris was one of 42 senators to sign a letter to Trump administration officials Alex Azar, Seema Verma, and Steve Mnuchin arguing that the administration was improperly using Section 1332 of the Affordable Care Act to authorize states to "increase health care costs for millions of consumers while weakening protections for individuals with pre-existing conditions." The senators requested the administration withdraw the policy and "re-engage with stakeholders, states, and Congress."
On July 29, 2019, Harris unveiled a health plan that would expand coverage while preserving a role for private insurance companies, the plan calling for transitioning to a Medicare for All system over a period of ten years that would be concurrent with infants and the uninsured automatically being placed into the system while other individuals would have the option to buy into the health care plan backed by the government. The plan has been met with some criticism from both democrats and republicans.
Immigration
Harris has expressed support for San Francisco's sanctuary city policy of not inquiring about immigration status in the process of a criminal investigation. She argued that it is important that immigrants be able to talk with law enforcement without fear.
On October 25, 2017, Harris stated she would not support a spending bill until Congress addressed the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program in a way that clarified "what we are going to do to protect and take care of our DACA young people in this country." She did not support a February 2018 proposal by some Democrats to provide President Trump with $25 billion in funding for a border wall in exchange for giving DREAMers a pathway to citizenship.
In a January 2018 interview, when asked by Hiram Soto about her ideal version of a bipartisan deal on the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, Harris stated the need to focus on comprehensive immigration reform and "pass a clean DREAM Act."
In April 2018, Harris was one of five senators to send a letter to acting director of ICE Thomas Homan on standards used by the agency when determining how to detain a pregnant woman, requesting that pregnant women not be held in custody unless under extraordinary standards after reports "that ICE has failed to provide critical medical care to pregnant women in immigration detention – resulting in miscarriages and other negative health outcomes".
In July 2018, the Trump administration falsely accused Harris of "supporting the animals of MS-13." She responded, "As a career prosecutor, I actually went after gangs and transnational criminal organizations. That's being a leader on public safety. What is not, is ripping babies from their mothers."
In July 2018, Harris was one of 22 senators to sponsor the Stop Shackling and Detaining Pregnant Women Act, which if enacted would prohibit immigration officers from detaining pregnant women in a majority of circumstances and improve conditions of care for individuals in custody.
In August 2018, Harris led fifteen Democrats and Bernie Sanders in a letter to United States Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen demanding that the Trump administration take immediate action in attempting to reunite 539 migrant children with their families, citing each passing day of inaction as intensifying "trauma that this administration has needlessly caused for children and their families seeking humanitarian protection."
In November 2018, Harris was one of eleven senators to sign a letter to United States Secretary of Defense James Mattis concerning "the overt politicization of the military" with the Trump administration's deployment of 5,800 troops to the U.S.–Mexico border, and requesting a briefing and written justification from the U.S. Northern Command for troop deployment, while urging Mattis to "curb the unprecedented escalation of DOD involvement in immigration enforcement."
In January 2019, Harris was one of twenty senators to sponsor the Dreamer Confidentiality Act, a bill imposing a ban on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) from passing information collected on DACA recipients to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the Department of Justice, or any other law enforcement agency with exceptions in the case of fraudulent claims, national security issues, or non-immigration related felonies being investigated.
In June 2019, following the Housing and Urban Development Department's confirmation that DACA recipients did not meet eligibility for federal backed loans, Harris and eleven other senators introduced The Home Ownership Dreamers Act, legislation that mandated that the federal government was not authorized to deny mortgage loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or the Agriculture Department solely due to the immigration status of an applicant.
In July 2019, along with Kirsten Gillibrand and Amy Klobuchar, Harris sent a letter to the Office of Refugee Resettlement asserting that the agency "should be prioritizing reunification of every child as soon as possible, but instead it has been responsible for policies that are forcing longer stays in government custody for children" and that it was mandatory that the office "ensure that the custody and processing of is meeting the minimum standards required by domestic and international law."
In July 2019, Harris and fifteen other Senate Democrats introduced the Protecting Sensitive Locations Act which mandated that ICE agents get approval from a supervisor ahead of engaging in enforcement actions at sensitive locations with the exception of special circumstances and that agents receive annual training in addition to being required to report annually regarding enforcement actions in those locations.
In August 2019, after the Trump administration released a new regulation imposing the possibility that any green card and visa applicants could be turned down in the event they have low incomes or little education and have used benefits such as food stamps and housing vouchers at some point, Harris referred to the regulation as part of President Trump's ongoing campaign "to vilify a whole group of people" and cited Trump's sending of service members to the southern border and building a border wall as part of his goal to distract "from the fact that he has betrayed so many people and has actually done very little that has been productive in the best interest of American families."
LGBT rights
During her tenure as California Attorney General, Harris declined to defend the state's ban on same-sex marriage in court. She supported the Obama administration's guidance supporting transgender students. Following the Supreme Court's overturning of the ban on same-sex marriage, she proceeded to conduct California's first same-sex marriage. Later on in 2015, she argued in court to withhold gender reassignment surgery from two transgender inmates who were prescribed the procedure while serving the sentences. This stance disappointed some LGBT rights advocates; she later stated that she only took that stance in court because her job required her to do so.
As a member of the U.S. Senate, she co-sponsored the Equality Act.
Net neutrality
In September 2017, Harris was one of nine senators to sign a letter to Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai that charged the FCC with failing "to provide stakeholders with an opportunity to comment on the tens of thousands of filed complaints that directly shed light on proposed changes to existing net neutrality protections."
In March 2018, Harris was one of ten senators to sign a letter spearheaded by Jeff Merkley lambasting a proposal from FCC Chairman Ajit Pai that would curb the scope of benefits from the Lifeline program during a period where roughly 6.5 million people in poor communities relied on Lifeline to receive access to high-speed internet, citing that it was Pai's "obligation to the American public, as the Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, to improve the Lifeline program and ensure that more Americans can afford access, and have means of access, to broadband and phone service." The senators also advocated for insuring "Lifeline reaches more Americans in need of access to communication services."
Taxes
Harris opposed the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, and has called for a repeal of the bill's tax cuts for wealthy Americans. In 2018, she proposed a tax cut for the majority of working- and middle-class Americans. An analysis by the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center estimated that the bill would reduce federal revenue by $2.8 trillion over a decade. She proposed to pay for the tax cuts by repealing tax cuts for wealthy Americans and by increasing taxes on corporations.
Voting rights
In May 2019, Harris attributed the 2018 gubernatorial losses of Stacey Abrams and Andrew Gillum, in both Georgia and Florida to voter suppression.
Electoral history
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala D. Harris | 762,995 | 33.6 | |
Democratic | Alberto Torrico | 354,792 | 15.6 | |
Democratic | Chris Kelly | 350,757 | 15.5 | |
Democratic | Ted W. Lieu | 237,618 | 10.5 | |
Democratic | Pedro Nava | 222,941 | 9.7 | |
Democratic | Rocky Delgadillo | 219,494 | 9.6 | |
Democratic | Mike Schmier | 127,291 | 5.5 | |
Total votes | 2,275,888 | 100.0 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala Harris | 4,442,781 | 46.05% | −10.24% | |
Republican | Steve Cooley | 4,368,624 | 45.28% | +7.17% | |
Green | Peter Allen | 258,879 | 2.68% | +0.37% | |
Libertarian | Timothy J. Hannan | 246,583 | 2.56% | +0.46% | |
American Independent | Diane Beall Templin | 169,993 | 1.76% | N/A | |
Peace and Freedom | Robert J. Evans | 160,416 | 1.66% | +0.47% | |
Total votes | '9,647,276' | '100.0%' | N/A | ||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala Harris (Incumbent) | 2,177,480 | 53.2 | |
Republican | Ronald Gold | 504,091 | 12.3 | |
Republican | Phil Wyman | 479,468 | 11.7 | |
Republican | David King | 368,190 | 9.0 | |
Republican | John Haggerty | 336,433 | 8.2 | |
No party preference | Orly Taitz | 130,451 | 3.2 | |
Libertarian | Jonathan Jaech | 99,056 | 2.4 | |
Total votes | 4,095,169 | 100.0 |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala Harris (Incumbent) | 4,102,649 | 57.49% | +11.44% | |
Republican | Ronald Gold | 3,033,476 | 42.51% | −2.77% | |
Total votes | '7,136,125' | '100.0%' | N/A | ||
Democratic hold |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala Harris | 3,000,689 | 37.9% | |
Democratic | Loretta Sanchez | 1,416,203 | 17.9% | |
Republican | Duf Sundheim | 584,251 | 7.8% | |
Republican | Phil Wyman | 352,821 | 4.7% | |
Republican | Tom Del Beccaro | 323,614 | 4.3% | |
Republican | Greg Conlon | 230,944 | 3.1% | |
Democratic | Steve Stokes | 168,805 | 2.2% | |
Republican | George C. Yang | 112,055 | 1.5% | |
Republican | Karen Roseberry | 110,557 | 1.5% | |
Libertarian | Gail K. Lightfoot | 99,761 | 1.3% | |
Democratic | Massie Munroe | 98,150 | 1.3% | |
Green | Pamela Elizondo | 95,677 | 1.3% | |
Republican | Tom Palzer | 93,263 | 1.2% | |
Republican | Ron Unz | 92,325 | 1.2% | |
Republican | Don Krampe | 69,635 | 0.9% | |
No party preference | Eleanor García | 65,084 | 0.9% | |
Republican | Jarrell Williamson | 64,120 | 0.9% | |
Republican | Von Hougo | 63,609 | 0.8% | |
Democratic | President Cristina Grappo | 63,330 | 0.8% | |
Republican | Jerry J. Laws | 53,023 | 0.7% | |
Libertarian | Mark Matthew Herd | 41,344 | 0.6% | |
Peace and Freedom | John Thompson Parker | 35,998 | 0.5% | |
No party preference | Ling Ling Shi | 35,196 | 0.5% | |
Democratic | Herbert G. Peters | 32,638 | 0.4% | |
Democratic | Emory Peretz Rodgers | 31,485 | 0.4% | |
No party preference | Mike Beitiks | 31,450 | 0.4% | |
No party preference | Clive Grey | 29,418 | 0.4% | |
No party preference | Jason Hanania | 27,715 | 0.4% | |
No party preference | Paul Merritt | 24,031 | 0.3% | |
No party preference | Jason Kraus | 19,318 | 0.3% | |
No party preference | Don J. Grundmann | 15,317 | 0.2% | |
No party preference | Scott A. Vineberg | 11,843 | 0.2% | |
No party preference | Tim Gildersleeve | 9,798 | 0.1% | |
No party preference | Gar Myers | 8,726 | 0.1% | |
Republican | Billy Falling (write-in) | 87 | 0.0% | |
No party preference | Ric M. Llewellyn (write-in) | 32 | 0.0% | |
Republican | Alexis Stuart (write-in) | 10 | 0.0% | |
Total votes | 7,512,322 | 100.0% |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Democratic | Kamala Harris | 7,542,753 | 61.60% | N/A | |
Democratic | Loretta Sanchez | 4,701,417 | 38.40% | N/A | |
Total votes | '12,244,170' | '100.0%' | N/A | ||
Democratic hold |
Personal life
Harris is married to California attorney Douglas Emhoff, who was at one time partner-in-charge at Venable LLP's Los Angeles office. Emhoff is Jewish. They married on August 22, 2014, in Santa Barbara, California. The Washington Post reported their 2018 income as $1.9 million. Her sister is Maya Harris, an MSNBC political analyst, and her brother-in-law is Tony West, general counsel of Uber and a former United States Department of Justice senior official. She has two adult stepchildren.
From 1994 to 1995, Harris dated Speaker of the California State Assembly Willie Brown, who appointed her to paid positions at the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board and the California Medical Assistance Commission. The relationship, which she ended after his election to mayor of San Francisco, helped launch her later political career by helping her meet influential people.
She has received honorary degrees from Howard University (2012), the University of Southern California (2015), and Howard University (2017). She identifies as a Baptist.
Publications
Harris has written two non-fiction books and one children's book. She also wrote the entry for Christine Blasey Ford when Ford was named one of the Time 100 people in 2019.
- The Truths We Hold: An American Journey. Diversified Publishing. 2019. ISBN 1984886223.
- Superheroes Are Everywhere. Penguin Young Readers Group. 2019. ISBN 1984837494.
- Smart on Crime: A Career Prosecutor's Plan to Make Us Safer. Chronicle Books. 2009. ISBN 0811865282.
See also
- List of African-American United States Senators
- List of female state attorneys-general in the United States
- List of United States politicians of Indian descent
- List of United States Senators from California
- Women in the United States Senate
References
- Ken Thomas (February 15, 2013). "You Say 'Ka-MILLA;' I Say 'KUH-ma-la.' Both Are Wrong". Wall Street Journal: 1.
'It's "COMMA-la,"' Ms. Harris said with a laugh. 'Just think of "calm." At least I try to be most of the time.'
- Viser, Matt (January 21, 2019). "Kamala Harris enters 2020 Presidential Race". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 22, 2019.
- ": The New Face of Politics… An Interview with Kamala Harris". DesiClub. Archived from the original on December 11, 2010. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Obituary: Dr. Shyamala G. Harris". San Francisco Chronicle. March 22, 2009. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
- "Kamala Harris". The Los Angeles Times. October 24, 2004. p. 108. Retrieved January 23, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- See:
- "PM Golding congratulates Kamala Harris-daughter of Jamaican – on appointment as California's First Woman Attorney General". Jamaican Information Service. December 2, 2010. Archived from the original on January 15, 2012. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - "California Attorney General Kamala Harris marries Douglas Emhoff". The American Bazaar. September 2, 2014.
- Staff writer (April 7, 2013). "Why Kamala Harris is probably not thrilled with compliment". CalWatchdog.com.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|website=
(help)
- "PM Golding congratulates Kamala Harris-daughter of Jamaican – on appointment as California's First Woman Attorney General". Jamaican Information Service. December 2, 2010. Archived from the original on January 15, 2012. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
- ^ Bazelon, Emily (May 25, 2016). "Kamala Harris, a 'Top Cop' in the era of Black Lives Matter". The New York Times Magazine.
- ^ "Kamala Harris' Jamaican Heritage". jamaicaglobalonline.com. October 1, 2018. Retrieved November 1, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|website=
(help) - Cadelago, Christopher (February 12, 2019), "Why Kamala Harris is glad people are asking if she's black enough", Politico.
- ^ Martinez, Michael (October 23, 2010). "A 'female Obama' seeks California attorney general post". CNN. Retrieved January 22, 2014.
- Egelko, Bob (November 7, 2012). "Kamala Harris mixing idealism, political savvy". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 28, 2017.
- Sreevatsan, Ajai (November 28, 2010). "California's next A-G, city's pride". The Hindu. Retrieved June 11, 2017.
- Finnegan, Michael (September 30, 2015). "How race helped shape the politics of Senate candidate Kamala Harris". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
- ^ Sari Horwitz (February 27, 2012). "Justice Dept. lawyer Tony West to take over as acting associate attorney general". The Washington Post.
- ^ Shaban, Hamza (October 27, 2017). "Uber hires PepsiCo's Tony West as general counsel". The Washington Post.
{{cite news}}
:|archive-date=
requires|archive-url=
(help) - Bazelon, Emily (May 25, 2016). "Kamala Harris, a 'Top Cop' in the Era of Black Lives Matter". The New York Times Magazine. Retrieved December 1, 2018.
- Spencer, Saranac Hale (July 13, 2018). "Sen. Harris Didn't 'Lie' About Integration". Factcheck.org.
- "Fact check: Kamala Harris was correct on integration in Berkeley, school district confirms".
- Kamala Harris, The Truths We Hold: An American Journey (New York: Penguin Press, 2019), p. 19.
- Sam Whiting (May 14, 2009). "Kamala Harris grew up idolizing lawyers". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
- "Brilliant Careers". Super Lawyers. August 1, 2010. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
- "Will ex-Montrealer Kamala Harris be the one to unseat Donald Trump?". Montreal Gazette. October 9, 2017. Retrieved June 30, 2019.
- Dale, Daniel (December 29, 2018). "U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris's classmates from her Canadian high school cheer her potential run for president". thestar.com. Retrieved July 1, 2019.
- "Rising Democratic party star Kamala Harris has Montreal roots". CTV News. The Canadian Press. October 9, 2017. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- Dale, Daniel (December 29, 2018). "U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris's classmates from her Canadian high school cheer her potential run for president". Toronto Star. Retrieved February 2, 2019.
- ^ Owens, Donna (November 8, 2016). "Meet Kamala Harris, the second Black woman elected to the U.S. Senate". NBC News. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
- "Howard Alumna Becomes First Woman Elected as California Attorney General" (Press release). Howard University. December 17, 2010. Archived from the original on January 12, 2011. Retrieved November 14, 2014.
{{cite press release}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - "Kamala Harris '89 Wins Race for California Attorney General". UC Hastings News Room. November 24, 2010. Archived from the original on November 30, 2010. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - California, The State Bar of. "State Bar of CA :: Kamala Devi Harris". members.calbar.ca.gov. Archived from the original on July 13, 2016. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|dead-url=
(help) - ^ Richardson, James (1996). Willie Brown: A Biography. University of California Press. pp. 390, 394, 402, 404.
- "Women's Radio: This DA Makes a Difference For Women". Womensradio.com. Archived from the original on December 19, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Martin, Nina (August 2007). "Why Kamala Matters". San Francisco Magazine. Retrieved May 12, 2015.
- ^ Kruse, Michael (August 9, 2019). "How San Francisco's Wealthiest Families Launched Kamala Harris". POLITICO Magazine. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
- ^ Fraley, Malaika (October 26, 2009). "Book 'em, Kamala – S.F. District Attorney Harris adds author to list of credits". East Bay Times. Walnut Creek, California: Bay Area News Group.
- ^ Marteau Emerson, Kimberly (November 24, 2009). "Smart on Crime Q&A". HuffPost. New York City: Huffington Post Media Group.
- "Kamala Harris: Finding the Path Back on Track". HuffPost. New York City: Huffington Post Media Group. November 9, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Begin, Brent (October 14, 2009). "District Attorney program is now statewide example". San Francisco Examiner. San Francisco, California: San Francisco Media Company LLC.
- ^ Finnegan, Michael. San Francisco D.A.'s program trained illegal immigrants for jobs they couldn't legally hold, Los Angeles Times, June 22, 2009.
- Willon, Phil (July 6, 2016). "8 things to know about Senate candidate Kamala Harris' career gold stars and demerits". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California: Tronc. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved January 10, 2017.
- Knight, Heather (November 7, 2007). "Kamala Harris celebrates unopposed bid for district attorney". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation. Retrieved February 2, 2011.
- Zernike, Kate (May 18, 2008). "She Just Might Be President Someday". The New York Times. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
- ^ "Kamala Harris wins Dem nomination for California AG". Z News. June 9, 2010. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
- Winston, Ali (May 8, 2013). "Cover of Darkness: S.F. Police Turned a Blind Eye to Some of the City's Most Dangerous Criminals – Who Were Also Some of Their Most Trusted Sources". San Francisco Weekly. San Francisco, California: San Francisco Media Co. Retrieved May 8, 2013.
- "Convicting Felons – Kamala Harris". January 3, 2008. Archived from the original on January 3, 2008. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - Peter Jamison (May 5, 2010). "A Lack of Conviction". SF Weekly.
- Van Derbeken, Jaxon (March 20, 2006). "Trials and tribulations of Kamala Harris, D.A. / 2 years into term, prosecutor, police have their differences". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation. p. 4. Archived from the original on January 18, 2012.
- staff, C. N. N. "Fact check: CNN's Democratic debate, night 2". CNN. Retrieved August 1, 2019.
- Van Derbeken, Jaxon (March 20, 2006). "Trials and tribulations of Kamala Harris, D.A. / 2 years into term, prosecutor, police have their differences". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- ^ Jamison, Peter (May 5, 2010). "A Lack of Conviction". SF Weekly. San Francisco, California: San Francisco Media Company. Retrieved March 9, 2019.
- Levinson, David (March 18, 2002). Encyclopedia of Crime and Punishment. Vol. 1. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE Publications. ISBN 978-0-7619-2258-2. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Van Derbeken, Jaxon (May 21, 2010). "Judge rips Harris' office for hiding problems". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation. Retrieved July 28, 2010.
- Choksi, Niraj (September 5, 2014). "California could become the first state to ban the 'gay panic' defense". The Washington Post. Washington DC: Nash Holdings LLC. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
- "Marriage Equality". Kamalaharris.org. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "Endorsements". Kamalaharris.org. September 24, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Smith, Ben (December 24, 2010). "Kamala Harris: Democrats' anti-Palin". Politico. Arlington, Virginia: Capitol News Company. Retrieved December 21, 2016.
- Statement of Vote June 8, 2010, Direct Primary Election, California Secretary of State.
- ^ Rizo, Chris (April 16, 2010). "Villaraigosa eschews local candidates, backs Harris for Calif. attorney general". Legal Newsline. Archived from the original on July 23, 2011. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|dead-url=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - "Kamala Harris wins attorney general's race as Steve Cooley concedes". Los Angeles Times. November 24, 2010.
- Olopade, Dayo (June 9, 2010). "Kamala Harris, the "Female Obama", Wins Primary for California Attorney General". Daily Beast. New York City: IAC. Retrieved November 3, 2010.
- Martinez, Michael (October 22, 2010). "A 'female Obama' seeks California attorney general post". CNN. Atlanta, Georgia: Turner Broadcasting Systems.
- Cabanatuan, Michael (November 3, 2010). "Brown, Boxer, Newsom win; Prop. 19 goes down". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation.
- Chitnis, Deepak (February 14, 2014). "As Kamala Harris announces bid for re-election, GOP scratching their heads for a candidate to face her". The American Bazaar.
- "Endorsement: Attorney General Kamala Harris, all but unchallenged, deserves a second term". The Sacramento Bee. August 25, 2014.
- "Re-elect Kamala Harris as attorney general – but demand more: Endorsement". Los Angeles Daily News. October 3, 2014.
- "For attorney general, Kamala Harris". Los Angeles Times. September 23, 2014.
- "Kamala Harris Re-Elected As California Attorney General". HuffPost. November 5, 2014.
- Parker, Barbara; Rebecca Kaplan (March 5, 2012). "Kamala Harris' foreclosure deal a win for state". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
- Lazo, Alejandro (May 12, 2012). "Mortgage deal cash is divvied". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
- "Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Announces Passage of Bills in California Homeowner Bill of Rights Package". California Attorney General. May 30, 2012. Retrieved June 18, 2012.
- "How does the California Homeowner Bill of Rights Help You?". ForeclosureHelpSCC. June 4, 2013. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
- ^ St. John, Paige (November 14, 2014). "Federal judges order California to expand prison releases". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- ^ Neklason, Annika (December 7, 2017). "California Is Running Out of Inmates to Fight Its Fires". The Atlantic. Boston, Massachusetts: Emerson Collective.
- Ollstein, Alice Miranda (November 19, 2014). "California Attorney General Says Her Office's Defense of Prison Labor 'Evokes Chain Gangs". ThinkProgress. Washington DC: Center for American Progress Action Fund.
- "S.F. attorney Kamala Harris enters attorney general race". Lodi News-Sentinel. November 13, 2008. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
- BondGraham, Darwin (May 29, 2014). "The Strike Force That Never Struck". East Bay Express.
- "Kamala Harris has complicated history with Wall Street". CNBC. January 26, 2019.
- Dayen, David (January 3, 2017). "Treasury Nominee Steve Mnuchin's Bank Accused of "Widespread Misconduct" in Leaked Memo". The Intercept. New York City: First Look Media.
- Lane, Sylvan (January 4, 2017). "Dem defends decision not to charge Trump Treasury pick over foreclosures". The Hill.
- "Donor Lookup". OpenSecrets.
- ^ Garcia, Eric (February 14, 2017). "Harris Was Only 2016 Senate Democratic Candidate to Get Cash From Mnuchin". Roll Call. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
- "PN26 – Nomination of Steven T. Mnuchin for Department of the Treasury, 115th Congress (2017–2018)". congress.gov. February 13, 2017.
- "Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Notifies Mobile App Developers of Non-Compliance with California Privacy Law". October 30, 2012. Retrieved October 31, 2012.
- Iain Thomson (October 31, 2012). "California begins crackdown on mobile app developers". The Register.
- "Jeffrey B. Norsworthy (a/k/a Michelle-Lael B. Norsworthy), Plaintiff, v. Jeffrey Beard, et al., Defendants". United States District Court, N.D. California, Case No. 14-cv-00695-JST. November 18, 2014. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
- Egelko, Bob (February 10, 2017). "Parolee has sex-reassignment surgery after years of battling state". San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco, California: Hearst Corporation. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
- "Norswrthy v. Beard et al 14- cv-00695-". Transgender Law Center. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- St. John, Paige (May 21, 2015). "Inmate who won order for sex reassignment surgery recommended for parole". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California: Tronc. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
- Johnson, Chris (April 10, 2015). "Harris appeals order granting gender reassignment to trans inmate". Washington Blade. Retrieved October 12, 2017.
- Barmann, Jay (March 21, 2016). "Former Trans Inmate Michelle-Lael Norsworthy Speaks Out About Her New Transition, To Civilian Life". SFist. San Francisco, California: Gothamist LLC. Archived from the original on November 5, 2017. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Brown, Annie (May 17, 2016). "Michelle's Case". The California Sunday Magazine. San Francisco, California: Emerson Collective. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
- Heimpel, Daniel (February 28, 2015). "Kamala Harris' Bureau of Children's Justice Takes Shape". The Chronicle of Social Change. San Francisco. Retrieved March 2, 2015.
- "California Prosecutor Falsifies Transcript of Confession". The Observer. March 4, 2015. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
- "People v. Velasco-Palacios CA5, F068833". Court Listener. February 24, 2015. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
- White, Randol; Bell, Jordan; Osborn, Lisa (June 4, 2015). "State Attorney General investigates whether oil spill was result of criminal activity". KCBXfm. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Smith, Doug; Mejia, Brittny (May 17, 2016). "Pipeline company indicted in 2015 Santa Barbara County oil spill". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California: Tronc. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Brown, Lincoln (June 1, 2016). "California Issues Subpoenas To Oil And Gas Companies In Price-Fixing Probe". OilPrice.com. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
- "California attorney general opens criminal investigation into Sheriff's Department over Mitrice Richardson case". Retrieved December 13, 2016.
- Romero, Dennis (February 16, 2016). "She Went Missing From a Sheriff's Station. Now the State Wants Answers". L.A. Weekly. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
- "The California Attorney General's Office Finally Agrees to Look Into the Mitrice Richardson Case". Los Angeles Magazine. February 19, 2016. Retrieved December 13, 2016.
- "Mitrice Richardson's family speaks out as state says deputies shouldn't be prosecuted in her death". The Daily News. January 31, 2017. Retrieved January 31, 2017.
- "Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Announces Criminal Charges Against Senior Corporate Officers of Backpage.com for Profiting from Prostitution and Arrest of Carl Ferrer, CEO" (Press release). California Office of the Attorney General. October 6, 2016. Retrieved November 21, 2016.
- ^ Tom Jackman, Backpage CEO Carl Ferrer pleads guilty in three states, agrees to testify against other website officials, Washington Post (April 13, 2018).
- ^ Thompson, Don (April 12, 2018). "Backpage.com CEO pleads guilty to California money charges". Associated Press. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
- Cassidy, Megan; Ruelas, Ricgard (April 14, 2018). "Backpage CEO pleads guilty, could spend 5 years in prison". Montgomery Advertiser. p. 3B.
- Hawkins, Derek (January 10, 2017). "Backpage.com shuts down adult services ads after relentless pressure from authorities". The Washington Post. Washington DC: Nash Holdings LLC. Retrieved January 11, 2017.
- Sarah D. Wire, Sen. Kamala Harris praises closure of Backpage.com adult section, Los Angeles times (January 10, 2017).
- "What Happens To Supreme Court In Obama's Second Term?: The Two-Way". NPR. November 11, 2012. Retrieved January 11, 2014.
- "Potential Supreme Court Nominees". The New York Times. New York City: New York Times Company. February 14, 2016.
- Camia, Catalina (September 25, 2014). "After Eric Holder: Potential attorney general choices". USA Today. Mclean, Virginia: Gannett Company. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
- "Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Issues Statement on President Obama's U.S. Attorney General Nomination". Highland Community News. November 10, 2014.
- "Kamala Harris to announce U.S. Senate bid Tuesday". CNN. January 12, 2015. Retrieved January 12, 2015.
- Mehta, Seema (January 13, 2015). "Kamala Harris launches U.S. Senate bid, begins raising money". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 13, 2015.
- Cadelago, Christopher (April 6, 2015). "Kamala Harris raises $2.5 million for U.S. Senate run". The Sacramento Bee.
- "California Attorney General Kamala Harris scrutinized for luxury travel, expenses". The Orange County Register. December 14, 2015.
- "Posh Hotels And Pricey Airfare: Meet the Senate Candidate Driving Democrats Crazy". National Journal. December 6, 2015.
- "Internal poll puts Harris well ahead in California Senate race". Politico. January 23, 2015.
- Richman, Josh. "Poll: Kamala Harris leads California Senate contenders, except for 'undecided'". San Jose Mercury News.
- "Kamala Harris leads U.S. Senate race, followed by Sanchez, poll shows". The Sacramento Bee. October 8, 2015.
- "Kamala Harris receives California Democratic Party endorsement". The Sacramento Bee. February 27, 2016.
- ^ Artz, Matthew (February 27, 2016). "Kamala Harris wins state Democratic Party's endorsement". The Mercury News.
- Wildermuth, John (May 11, 2016). "In Senate debate, Kamala Harris on the hot seat". San Francisco Chronicle.
- "Kamala Harris is focus of California's final U.S. Senate debate before primary". Los Angeles Times. May 10, 2016.
- Willon, Phil (May 23, 2016). "California Gov. Jerry Brown backs Kamala Harris for U.S. Senate".
- "Kamala Harris wins U.S. Senate primary". Los Angeles Times. June 7, 2016.
- Willon, Phil (July 19, 2016). "Obama, Biden endorse Kamala Harris for U.S. Senate". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 19, 2016.
- "United States Senator (primary results)" (PDF). California Secretary of State. July 2016.
- Alex Padilla (July 2016). "Presidential Primary Election – Statement of Vote, June 7, 2016". California Secretary of State.
- Myers, John (June 8, 2016). "Two Democrats will face off for California's U.S. Senate seat, marking first time a Republican will not be in contention". Los Angeles Times.
- "Live California election results". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
- Willon, Phil (November 10, 2016). "Newly elected Kamala Harris vows to defy Trump on immigration". Los Angeles Times.
- Willon, Phil (December 1, 2016). "Essential Politics November archives". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved December 20, 2016.
- "Brown taps Becerra as next state attorney general". ABC7 Los Angeles. December 1, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2016.
- "Kamala Harris: The women's march is 'absolutely personal to me'". Los Angeles Times. January 21, 2017.
Cockerham, Sean (January 21, 2017). "With Dems thinking 2020, Kamala Harris takes DC spotlight". The Sacramento Bee. - Seipel, Brooke (January 27, 2017). "Kamala Harris: 'Make no mistake – this is a Muslim ban'".
- US expands travel ban to include N Korea, BBC.
- Ting, Eric (January 8, 2019). "Kamala Harris says John Kelly got mad when she called him at home during the travel ban". San Francisco Chronicle.
- "Sen. Kamala Harris speaks out against Betsy DeVos as part of Democrats' 24-hour blitz on Senate floor". Los Angeles Times. February 6, 2017.
- "Sen. Kamala Harris: 'You Deserve An Attorney General Who Recognizes The Full Human Quality Of All People'". newsone.com. February 8, 2017.
- "Taking on Trump puts Kamala Harris in spotlight". San Francisco Chronicle. February 19, 2017.
- Cockerham, Sean (March 2, 2017). "Kamala Harris calls on attorney general to resign over contacts with the Russians". Sacramento Bee.
- Sullivan, Bartholomew D. (March 14, 2017). "Sen. Kamala Harris: ACA repeal involves 'moral values'". USA Today.
- Mazza, Ed (May 9, 2017). "Sen. Kamala Harris Slams GOP Rep's Health Care Claim: 'What The F**k Is That?'". HuffPost. Retrieved October 12, 2018 – via Huff Post.
- Jalonick, Mary Clare (June 7, 2017). "Harris Reminded to Be Respectful During Intel Hearing". U.S. News & World Report. Washington, D.C. Associated Press.
- ^ Harris Reminded to Be Respectful During Intel Hearing.
- Finnegan, Michael (June 14, 2017). "Sen. Kamala Harris leaves Sessions 'nervous' in interrogation over his refusal to disclose conversations with Trump". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Sen. Kamala Harris leaves Sessions 'nervous'".
- Ansari, M. K. (June 8, 2017). "The Silencing Of Kamala Harris During The Senate Hearing Was Sexist: Why do people take issue when a woman asks direct questions?". HuffPost. New York.
- Baragona, Justin (June 14, 2017). "CNN's Kirsten Powers Confronts Jason Miller For Calling Kamala Harris 'Hysterical'". Mediaite.com. New York.
- "U.S. Senate: U.S. Senate Roll Call Votes 115th Congress, 1st Session". www.senate.gov. July 27, 2017.
- Johnson, Victoria (January 16, 2018). "Kamala Harris Calls Bullsh*t on Homeland Security Secretary for Supporting Trump's Alleged 'Sh*thole' Remarks". Complex. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Coldewey, Devin (April 10, 2018). "Sen. Harris puts Zuckerberg between a rock and a hard place for not disclosing data misuse". Techcrunch. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Sloss, Jason (June 22, 2018). "'Utter despair': Sen. Harris visits migrant mothers separated from children in San Diego". Fox 5 San Diego. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Ring, Trudy (October 10, 2018). "FBI Head Stonewalls as Kamala Harris Grills Him on Kavanaugh Probe". Advocate. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Stanton, Sam; McGough, Mike; Yoon-Hendricks, Alex (October 26, 2018). "Suspicious package in Sacramento addressed to Sen. Kamala Harris, sources say". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- DeBonis, Mike; Bade, Rachel (February 11, 2018). "Rep. Omar apologizes after House Democratic leadership condemns her comments as 'anti-Semitic tropes'". The Washington Post.
- "Kamala Harris defends Ilhan Omar after backlash to Israel comments". San Francisco Chronicle. March 6, 2019.
- "Schumer Announces Updated Senate Democratic Committee Memberships for the 115th Congress, 2nd Session". www.democrats.senate.gov. Retrieved January 10, 2018.
- "Membership". Congressional Black Caucus. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
- "Members". Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus. Retrieved May 17, 2018.
- "Analysis | The top 15 Democratic presidential candidates for 2020, ranked". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
- Beckett, Lois (July 22, 2017). "Kamala Harris: young, black, female – and the Democrats' best bet for 2020?". The Guardian. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
- Cillizza, Chris; Enten, Harry (November 12, 2018). "Why Kamala Harris is the new Democratic frontrunner". CNN. Retrieved November 22, 2018.
- Shelbourne, Mallory (June 25, 2018). "Kamala Harris on 2020 presidential bid: 'I'm not ruling it out'". TheHill. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
- "Kamala Harris increases her visibility in front of possible presidential bid". July 29, 2018. Retrieved October 12, 2018.
- CNN, Eric Bradner. "Kamala Harris signs book deal amid 2020 speculation". Retrieved October 12, 2018.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - "Prominent Dem Kamala Harris Endorses Mahlon Mitchell In Governor Bid". Wisconsin Public Radio. Associated Press. July 26, 2018. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Brennan, Chris (July 13, 2018). "Kamala Harris stumps for Bob Casey, sidesteps talk of 2020". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Schechter, Maayan (October 19, 2018). "Madam president? In SC, Kamala Harris fuels speculation of a 2020 presidential run". The State. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- Reston, Maeve (January 21, 2019). "Kamala Harris to run for president in 2020". CNN. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
- "Kamala Harris raises $1.5 million in first 24 hours; ties record set by Sanders in 2016". Retrieved January 23, 2019.
- "Bernie Sanders raises 6 million in first 24 hours of campaign". Retrieved February 25, 2019.
- Beckett, Lois (January 27, 2019). "Kamala Harris kicks off 2020 campaign with hometown Oakland rally". The Guardian. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
- "Kamala Harris ties Warren for third place in post-debate poll". Vox. June 30, 2019.
- Flegenheimer, Matt; Burns, Alexander (June 27, 2019). "Kamala Harris Makes the Case That Joe Biden Should Pass That Torch to Her". The New York Times.
- Agiesta, Jennifer (July 1, 2019). "CNN Poll: Harris and Warren rise and Biden slides after first Democratic debates". CNN.
- "Kamala Harris's Ratings and Endorsements". VoteSmart.com. July 15, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|dead-url=
(help); Italic or bold markup not allowed in:|website=
(help) - ^ Herndon, Astead (January 21, 2019). "Kamala Harris Joins Democratic Presidential Field". The New York Times. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
But like many Democrats, she has sought to align herself with the party's leftward drift in recent years, proclaiming her support for "Medicare for All" and, after an initial hesitation, disavowing most corporate donations and embracing the legalization of recreational marijuana, which Ms. Harris once rebuffed.
- ^ "Democratic U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris Jumps Into 2020 White House Race". The New York Times. Reuters. January 21, 2019. Retrieved January 21, 2019.
Harris' campaign will focus on reducing the high cost of living with a middle-class tax credit, pursuing immigration and criminal justice changes and a Medicare-for-all healthcare system, aides said. She has said she will reject corporate political action committee money.
- "Where the 2020 Candidates Stand on Campaign Finance". Sludge. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- Mehta, Seema. "Major Democratic donor hosts Sen. Kamala Harris in the Hamptons as speculation mounts about her political future". latimes.com.
- Slodysko, Brian; Summers, Juana (March 20, 2019). "Hollywood power elite hosting Kamala Harris fundraiser". AP NEWS. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- Goldmacher, Shane; Martin, Jonathan (March 30, 2019). "2020 Democrats Love Small Donors. But Some Really Love Big Donors, Too". The New York Times. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- Fang, Lee (April 17, 2019). "Democratic 2020 candidates promised to reject lobbyist donations, but many accepted the cash anyway". The Intercept. Retrieved April 23, 2019.
- "Most Democratic presidential hopefuls still relying on large campaign donations". April 16, 2019.
- "Kamala Harris Says Her Opposition to Marijuana Legalization Is 'Not True.' We Have the Receipts!". February 11, 2019.
- Lybrand, Holmes. "Kamala Harris' record on marijuana legalization". CNN.
- Folley, Aris (May 10, 2018). "Kamala Harris backs Booker bill to legalize marijuana". The Hill. Retrieved August 9, 2018.
- Michael Liszewski (June 28, 2018). "Unprecedented Action in Congress Sends Signals that Ending Federal Marijuana Prohibition Could Finally Become Reality". Drug Policy Alliance.
- Tim Redmond (November 9, 2009). "Give Kamala Harris credit for integrity". The San Francisco Bay Guardian. Retrieved April 5, 2013.
- "Don't Kill in Our Name, Rally to Support Kamala Harris". Basetree. May 5, 2004. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- ^ "Police Officer Isaac Espinoza killer gets two consecutive life sentences – No possibility of parole". Sanfranciscosentinel.com. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Van Derbeken, Jaxon. "Edwin Ramos won't face death penalty", San Francisco Chronicle, September 11, 2009.
- ^ "San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris". Californiascapitol.com. April 15, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- ^ "CCFAJ-Report-final.pdf" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on November 14, 2010. Retrieved November 18, 2010.
- Axelrod, Tal (July 31, 2019). "Booker, Durbin and Leahy introduce bill to ban death penalty". The Hill.
- Lora, Maya (August 2, 2018). "Dems push FEMA on housing help for displaced Puerto Ricans". The Hill.
- Molly Redden (March 29, 2019). "The Human Costs Of Kamala Harris' War On Truancy". Huffington Post. Retrieved May 17, 2019.
a truancy law that then-California Attorney General Kamala Harris had personally championed in the state legislature
- "KGO/ABC 7's View from the Bay's Interview with Kamala Harris on Truancy Rates". Retrieved November 18, 2010 – via YouTube.
- "Kamala Harris on the Today Show". Retrieved November 18, 2010 – via YouTube.
- "Kamala Harris on race, college admission". San Francisco Chronicle. August 14, 2012.
- ^ "Attorney General Kamala D. Harris Files Brief in U.S. Supreme Court Affirmative Action Case, Fisher v. University of Texas". State of California Department of Justice. November 4, 2015.
- "How race-based affirmative action could return to UC". Los Angeles Times. June 26, 2016.
- "Kamala Harris' support of public university affirmative action defies the will of California voters". Los Angeles Times. June 29, 2016.
- "Kamala Harris Calls for Federally Mandated Busing". National Review. July 1, 2019.
- "Harris says busing should be considered, not mandated". Associated Press. July 3, 2019. Retrieved July 4, 2019.
- "Bipartisan group of lawmakers backs new election security bill". The Hill. December 21, 2017.
- Johnson, Jason B. (June 1, 2005). "San Francisco D.A. creates environmental unit ... team takes on crime mostly affecting the poor". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved August 20, 2010.
- "Protecting the Environment". Retrieved October 3, 2011.
- Manchester, Julia. "19 sens question EPA methodology behind Clean Power Plan repeal". The Hill.
- "Warren wants companies to disclose more about climate change impacts". The Hill. September 14, 2018.
- The Hill, January 28, 2019, "Kamala Harris Endorses Ocasio-Cortez's 'Green New Deal'"
- "Merkley resolution urges quick climate change action". ktvz.com. November 27, 2018.
- Beitsch, Rebecca. "Harris, Ocasio-Cortez unveil first step of Green New Deal". The Hill.
- "Senator Harris Statement on U.S. Military Action in Syria" (Press release). Office of Senator Kamala Harris. April 6, 2017.
- "As Democrats Shift Left on Palestine, 2020 Contender Kamala Harris Gives Off-the-Record Address to AIPAC". The Intercept. March 7, 2018.
- ^ "5 Jewish things to know about Kamala Harris". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. January 11, 2019.
- ^ "Record at a Glance: California Presidential Candidate Sen. Kamala Harris on Jewish Issues". JNS News Service. January 22, 2019.
- "S.Res.6 – A resolution objecting to United Nations Security Council Resolution 2334 and to all efforts that undermine direct negotiations between Israel and the Palestinians for a secure and peaceful settlement". congress.gov. 115th Congress (2017–2018).
- "U.S. Senate Approves Resolution Celebrating '50th Anniversary of the Reunification of Jerusalem'". Haaretz. June 6, 2017.
- "S. Res. 176 – A resolution commemorating the 50th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem". congress.gov. 115th Congress (2017–2018).
- "Sen. Todd Young urges action to end Muslim genocide in Myanmar". IndyStar. October 22, 2017.
- Samuels, Brett (February 5, 2018). "Dem senators tell Trump he doesn't have 'legal authority' to launch preemptive strike on North Korea". The Hill.
- "Harris Statement on Trump Violating the Iran Nuclear Deal". Kamala Harris United States Senator for California. May 8, 2018.
- "Here's how Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris voted on 'dark money,' the Yemen war and censuring the Saudi prince in Khashoggi's killing". The Press-Enterprise. December 14, 2018.
- Mitchell, Ellen (December 13, 2018). "Senate Dems urge Trump to continue nuclear arms control negotiations after treaty suspension". The Hill.
- "Here's how Sens. Feinstein and Harris voted on military raises, opioid addiction and drug prices". The Press-Enterprise. September 21, 2018.
- "Full Senate, in rare move, goes to White House grounds for classified North Korea briefing". Los Angeles Times. April 26, 2017.
- Daugherty, Owen (February 18, 2019). "Harris calls idea of Trump trusting Putin over US intel 'height of irresponsibility and shameful'". The Hill.
- "Kamala Harris on Gun Control". ontheissues.org. Retrieved October 4, 2017.
- Kamala D. Harris; et al. "D.C. v. Heller Amici Curiae brief of District Attorneys in support of Petitioners" (PDF). Retrieved March 2, 2008.
- "State Appellate Panel Strikes Down SF Handgun Ban". Archived from the original on March 5, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - Panzar, Javier; Willon, Phil. "Essential Politics September archives: Brown signs new laws and issues vetoes, fall campaigns heat up". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 4, 2017.
- https://www.facebook.com/SenatorKamalaHarris/posts/this-morning-we-awoke-to-horrific-news-out-of-las-vegas-more-than-50-people-were/558200937856377/
- Alcántara, Ann-Marie. "Kamala Harris Wants Americans to Commit to Action, Not Prayers, After Las Vegas Shooting". POPSUGAR News. Retrieved October 4, 2017.
- Axelrod, Tal (August 14, 2019). "Harris unveils plan to combat domestic terrorism". The Hill.
- https://www.thetrace.org/2019/06/democratic-candidates-2020-gun-policy/
- Weigel, David (August 30, 2017). "Sen. Kamala Harris backs Bernie Sanders's single-payer bill". The Washington Post. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
- https://nypost.com/2019/06/28/republicans-pounce-on-dems-plan-to-give-health-insurance-to-illegal-immigrants/
- "Dem senators unveil expanded public option for health insurance". The Hill. April 18, 2018.
- "U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin Calls on Trump Administration to Stop Pushing Health Insurance Plans that Weaken Pre-Existing Condition Protections". urbanmilwaukee.com. December 20, 2018.
- Daugherty, Owen (July 29, 2019). "Harris's health plan would keep private insurance". The Hill.
- News, A. B. C. "Kamala Harris' new health plan draws critics from all sides". ABC News. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
{{cite web}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - Jesse McKinley (November 16, 2006), "Immigrant Protection Rules Draw Fire", The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2010.
- Anthony York (October 5, 2010), "Attorney general debate: The Arizona immigration law", Los Angeles Times.
- Wire, Sarah D. (October 25, 2017). "Sen. Kamala Harris won't back federal spending bill without DACA fix". Los Angeles Times.
- "Kamala Harris's Early 'No' on Wall May Give Her an Edge in 2020". Bloomberg L.P. 2019. Retrieved January 19, 2019.
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|dead-url=
(help) - Soto, Hiram (January 12, 2018). "Senator Kamala Harris talks DACA amid heated negotiations". U-T San Diego.
- "Democrats question ICE standards for detaining pregnant women". The Hill. April 5, 2018.
- ^ "White Houses lashes out at Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren". Politico. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
- "Pants On Fire for WH claim Sen. Harris 'supporting MS-13'". @politifact. Retrieved July 4, 2018.
- Birnbaum, Emily (July 17, 2018). "Dems to propose legislation to prevent ICE from shackling pregnant women". The Hill.
- Weixel, Nathaniel (August 15, 2018). "Senate Dems demand immediate reunification of remaining separated children". The Hill.
- "2020 Democrats challenge Trump's use of troops at Mexico border". The Hill. November 20, 2018.
- Bernal, Rafael (January 22, 2019). "Senate Dems introduces bill to keep DACA info private". The Hill.
- "Bob Menendez, Cory Booker and others introduce bill to protect home loans for DACA holders". northjersey.com. June 21, 2019.
- Frazin, Rachel (July 3, 2019). "Harris, Gillibrand, Klobuchar call upon ORR to reform migrant children policies". The Hill.
- Self, Zac (July 11, 2019). "Bill would block immigration raids at schools, courthouses". 10news.com.
- Sullivan, Kate (August 12, 2019). "Kamala Harris says Trump administration's move on green cards part of effort to 'vilify a whole group of people'". CNN.
- Raw footage: Gay Marriage Resumes in California. Associated Press.
{{cite AV media}}
:|archive-date=
requires|archive-url=
(help) - ^ Chris Johnson (October 25, 2017). "Kamala Harris rises as LGBT favorite for 2020 – there's just one thing". Washington Blade.
- Neidig, Harper (September 21, 2017). "Senate Dems ask FCC to delay net neutrality repeal". The Hill.
- "Dems slam FCC head for proposed limits to low-income internet program". The Hill. March 29, 2018.
- ^ "Almost all of Sen. Harris's $2.8 trillion tax plan would help middle and working class, study finds".
{{cite web}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|dead-url=
(help) - "Kamala Harris's Tax Credit Would Cut Taxes Significantly For Low- And Moderate-Income Households But Could Add Trillions To The Debt". November 14, 2018.
- Hutzler, Alexandra (May 6, 2019). "Kamala Harris said that without voter suppression, Stacey Abrams and Andrew Gillum would've won their 2018 races". Newsweek.
- "Statement of Vote November 2, 2010, General Election" (PDF). Retrieved December 13, 2010.
- "Statement of Vote June 3, 2014, Statewide Direct Primary Election" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved September 25, 2014.
- "Statement of Vote November 4, 2014, General Election" (PDF). California Secretary of State. Retrieved December 30, 2014.
- "CSV Files - Voter Nominated". California Secretary of State. July 16, 2016.
- . California Secretary of State. November 13, 2016 http://elections.cdn.sos.ca.gov/sov/2016-general/sov/2016-complete-sov.pdf. Retrieved January 4, 2017.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Garchik, Leah (April 7, 2010). "California Attorney General Kamala Harris engaged". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 17, 2014.
- "Douglas C. Emhoff". Venable LLP.
- https://www.timesofisrael.com/kamala-harris-jewish-husband-takes-on-growing-public-role-in-2020-race/
- David Siders (August 25, 2014). "Kamala Harris grew up idolizing lawyers". The Sacramento Bee.
- https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/sen-kamala-d-harris-releases-tax-returns-showing-nearly-19-million-in-household-income-in-2018/2019/04/13/fdd538c6-5e34-11e9-a00e-050dc7b82693_story.html
- "Kamala Harris releases 15 years of tax returns". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- "Kamala Harris' Tax Return Shows Income Topping $2 Million". Fortune. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
- "California Attorney General Kamala Harris marries fellow lawyer". The Mercury News. August 26, 2014.
- Harris, Kamala (May 10, 2019). "Sen. Kamala Harris on Being 'Momala'". ELLE. Retrieved May 11, 2019.
- Zhou, Li (January 28, 2019). "Willie Brown's op-ed about Kamala Harris, explained". Vox. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
- "2 More Brown Associates Get Well-Paid Posts : Government: The Speaker appoints his frequent companion and a longtime friend to state boards as his hold on his own powerful position wanes". Los Angeles Times. November 29, 1994. Retrieved February 10, 2019.
- ^ "Recipients of Honorary Degrees (By Year) – Office of the Secretary – Howard University".
- Mann, Rachel (March 9, 2012). "Charter Day Orator Challenges Howard Students to Reject Barriers". Howard University. Retrieved May 7, 2019.
- "Speakers, Honorary Degree Recipients: 2000 to present | USC".
- Owens, Anthony D. (March 9, 2012). "Howard University Alumna and United States Senator Kamala D. Harris to Deliver 2017 Commencement Address". Howard University. Retrieved March 28, 2017.
- https://gulfnews.com/world/americas/first-hindu-in-us-congress-tulsi-gabbard-to-run-for-president-1.61390118
- "Reviewed by Mike Farris in New York Journal of Books".
- "Kamala Harris". ThriftBooks.
- "Christine Blasey Ford Is on the 2019 Time 100 List". Time.com. Retrieved April 17, 2019.
External links
- U.S. Senate website
- Campaign website
- Template:DMOZ
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Financial information (federal office) at the Federal Election Commission
- Legislation sponsored at the Library of Congress
- Profile at Vote Smart
- Template:Worldcat id
Legal offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded byTerence Hallinan | District Attorney of San Francisco 2004–2011 |
Succeeded byGeorge Gascón |
Preceded byJerry Brown | Attorney General of California 2011–2017 |
Succeeded byKathleen Kenealy Acting |
Party political offices | ||
Preceded byBarbara Boxer | Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from California (Class 3) 2016 |
Most recent |
U.S. Senate | ||
Preceded byBarbara Boxer | U.S. Senator (Class 3) from California 2017–present Served alongside: Dianne Feinstein |
Incumbent |
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial) | ||
Preceded byMaggie Hassan | United States Senators by seniority 86th |
Succeeded byJohn N. Kennedy |
California's current delegation to the United States Congress | |
---|---|
Senators |
|
Representatives (ordered by district) |
|
Current United States senators | ||
---|---|---|
President: ▌ Kamala Harris (D) ‧ President pro tempore: ▌ Chuck Grassley (R) | ||
| ||
|
United States senators from California | ||
---|---|---|
Class 1 | ||
Class 3 |
Statewide elected officials and legislative leaders of California | ||
---|---|---|
U.S. senators | ||
State government | ||
Senate |
| |
Assembly |
| |
Supreme Court (appointed, retention elections) |
California's delegation(s) to the 115th–116th United States Congress (ordered by seniority) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Attorneys general of California | ||
---|---|---|
|
- Kamala Harris
- 1964 births
- Candidates in the 2020 United States presidential election
- 20th-century American politicians
- 20th-century American women politicians
- 20th-century American women writers
- 20th-century American writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American politicians
- 21st-century American women politicians
- 21st-century American women writers
- Activists from the San Francisco Bay Area
- African-American Christians
- African-American United States presidential candidates
- American gun control advocates
- American legal writers
- American non-fiction crime writers
- American people of Indian Tamil descent
- American politicians of Indian descent
- American politicians of Jamaican descent
- American women activists
- American women lawyers
- American women non-fiction writers
- American women writers of Indian descent
- American writers of Jamaican descent
- Baptists from the United States
- California Attorneys General
- California Democrats
- Democratic Party United States Senators
- District attorneys in California
- Female United States presidential candidates
- Female United States Senators
- Howard University alumni
- Lawyers from Oakland, California
- LGBT rights activists from the United States
- Liberalism in the United States
- Living people
- Members of the United States Congress of Indian descent
- Politicians from Oakland, California
- United States Senators from California
- University of California, Hastings College of the Law alumni
- Women crime writers
- Women in California politics
- Writers from the San Francisco Bay Area