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Will Kamala Harris win?

By Peter Bowden - posted Wednesday, 21 August 2024


The United States election will be held on November 5, 2024. It is possibly the most important election in US history pitting an enormously accomplished black American woman, Kamala Harris, against a prior president, Donald Trump, convicted of 34 felony counts of falsifying business records alleging he was involved in a scheme that sought to cover up extramarital affairs in advance of the 2016 presidential election.

Trump has been repeatedly accused of spreading false and misleading claims.

The Washington Post fact checker posted recently "There's a recurring pattern to Trump's spreading of false information. First, he repeats a false claim endlessly, no matter how often it is debunked. Then, he elevates it every so often with a dusting of new information, usually a falsehood derived from a modicum of fact."

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Of the Washington DC newspapers, the Washington Post is the oldest-surviving and currently the most-read daily newspaper in Washington, with a strong reputation across the U.S. It is notable for exposing the Watergate scandal, among other achievements. Its assessment of Trump is believable

Who is Kamala Harris?

Kamala Devi Harris was born in Oakland, California, on October 20, 1964. She is the daughter of immigrants. Kamala Harris's father, Donald J. Harris, is Jamaican American of Afro-Jamaican ancestry. He is a Stanford University professor of economics (emeritus) who arrived in the United States from British Jamaica in 1961, for graduate study at UC Berkeley, receiving a PhD in economics in 1966. Donald Harris and Shyamala Gopalan met at a college club for African American students.

Her mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, immigrated to the US from southern India in the late 1950s. She earned her doctorate in nutrition and endocrinology at Berkeley and became an acclaimed breast cancer researcher before she passed away in 2009. Harris's parents divorced when she was seven. She has said that when she and her sister visited their father in Palo Alto on weekends, other children in the neighbourhood were not allowed to play with them because they were black.

She attended Howard University, a black university in Washington DC, then theUniversity of California College of the Law, San Francisco. She began her law career in the office of the district attorney (DA) of Alameda County, before being recruited to the San Francisco DA's Office and later the city attorney of San Francisco's office. In 2003, she was elected DA of San Francisco. She was elected attorney general of California in 2010 and re-elected in 2014. Harris served as the junior U.S. senator from California from 2017 to 2021. She defeated Loretta Sanchez in the 2016 Senate election to become the second Black woman and the first South Asian American to serve in the U.S. Senate.

As a senator, Harris advocated for stricter gun control laws, the Dream Act which would permanently protect immigrants who came to the United States as children but who are vulnerable to deportation, federal legalization of cannabis, and healthcare and taxation reforms. She gained a national profile for her pointed questioning of Trump administration officials during Senate hearings,

On January 20, 2021, Kamala Harris was sworn in as Vice President – the first woman, the first Black American, and the first South Asian American to be elected to this position.

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Majorities of Hispanic, Black and Asian voters in the US continue to favour the Democratic Party, while White voters remain more aligned with GOP. For years, the shares of Black, Asian and Latino citizens aged 18 or older signed up to cast ballots have trailed behind that of white adult citizens, according to the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey.

And while the estimated registration rate for Black eligible voters has stayed closer to (and, in 2012, even surpassed) the rate for white eligible voters, the rates for Asian Americans and Latinos - who make up the country's top two fast-growing electorates by race or ethnicity - have remained among the lowest of the racial and ethnic groups in the United States. Voting in the US requires you to be registered as such but voting itself is not compulsory. According to a 2012 study, 24% of the voting-eligible population in the United States are not registered to vote, equalling some 51 million U.S. citizens. Research has shown that the majority of those who do not register are not interested or believe that they will not affect the outcome. Such findings suggest that lesser educated people may be the higher nonregistered voters. A voter registration drive for Harris may be highly desirable.

What do the polls say?

CNN report on the polls on Harris vs Trump show that Trump holds 49% support among registered voters nationwide to Harris' 46%, a finding within the poll's margin of sampling error. Whilst Harris has managed to close the gap and is performing better than Biden among key demographics such as young voters and minorities, the RealClearPolitics polling average has Trump leading by 2 points nationally. In Kamala Harris' favour is that the Obamas, Barack and Michelle, have both endorsed Harris.

An examination of close to 20 different polling results show similar figures, with Harris leading in just three, one being by Fox News. One encouraging sign for Harris is an endorsement by the political arm of the League of United Latin American Citizens, which hadn't endorsed anyone for president in its nearly 100-year history.

The higher support for Trump may, however, be due to his authoritarian personality according to Peter Hartcher political and international editor of the Sydney Morning Herald. This opinion writer has the same belief.

According to a survey for the Financial Times, 42 percent of voters trust Harris more than Trump to handle the economy, a seven-point increase on Joe Biden's number last month.

The UK Newspaper, The Telegraph asserted recently that Benjamin Netanyahu may be emboldened to take stronger action now that Joe Biden has quit the US presidential race. Readers concerned with resolving the Israel/Hamas war would hope not. Many of us believe that the war, including the bombardment of Gaza citizens has already gone too far. Where does Donald Trump stand on the Israeli /Gaza war? One blog, Slate, claims that Donald Trump said Israel should quickly end the war in Gaza and "get back to the world of peace"-but it's not what it sounds like.

The once and possibly future president was not urging Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the bombing or withdraw Israeli troops. Quite the contrary: Trump was prodding him to intensify and accelerate the military campaign, "to finish it up and do it quickly."

He lambasted President Biden not for going easy on Israel, as leftist critics charge, but for applying pressure on Israel at all. "Biden is so bad for Israel," Trump said. "They should've never been attacked. If Biden were good to Israel, they wouldn't have been attacked."

Slate's opinion on this issue should be recognised. Its strong editorial voice and take on current events have been recognized with numerous awards, including the National Magazine Award for General Excellence Online'

Trump also said, in a separate interview with Fox News on Friday, that Hamas' invasion "would have never happened if I was president"-though, again, it's not clear how Trump's very presence in the Oval Office, even positing a favourable view of his time there, would have prevented the attack. (Would Hamas have feared U.S. retaliation? Would Netanyahu have taken better care of his southern border?)

This, of course, is typical Trump. He has also said that Russia would not have invaded Ukraine if he'd still been president-even though, in fact, he'd given every signal that he would tolerate anything Vladimir Putin would do, especially if it meant hurting Volodymyr Zelensky, whom he still detests for their "perfect" phone call, which prompted Trump's first impeachment.

Since the United States' founding, 29 of the 49 people who have served as vice president have gone on to formally seek a party's presidential nomination. It's been more common recently: 15 vice presidents since 1930 have launched presidential campaigns after serving in the deputy role. But only five of those 15 have been elected president. Perhaps the biggest electoral story of the past decade has been the phenomenon of education polarization, in which college-educated voters have been trending increasingly toward Democrats while non-college voters have been moving more toward the GOP- the Republican Party.

Kamala Harris found the perfect foil for J.D. Vance (Trumps VP) in Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) her vice-presidential running mate. But this opinion writer believes that Trump will win. The reason?? He is an autocratic male. The human race has supported and followed autocratic males since their evolution from Chimpanzees. Jane Goodall in her work with the apes in Tanzania pointed out that the massacre of Kasakela tribe of the Kahama tribe lead by an alpha male Mike .Goodall's findings including her belief that we inherited chimpanzee conflictual habits, have been subject to much criticism. A 2018 study published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology concluded that the Gombe War was most likely a consequence of a power struggle between three high-ranking males.

The author of this opinion piece supports the alpha male theory. In an On line Opinion article Do we have free will, he argues that we have a constrained free will. Extending this argument says that our decision-making processes are inherited from our tribal ancestry, and that ancestry has given us autocratic leaders and tribal warfare since the beginning of time. Donald trump is an autocratic leader. The Americans will vote for him. For the sake of a better world, I hope I am wrong, but fear that this diagnosis will be found to be correct. Wars, led by power hungry leaders, have been evidenced since the beginning of recorded history.

 

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About the Author

Peter Bowden is an author, researcher and ethicist. He was formerly Coordinator of the MBA Program at Monash University and Professor of Administrative Studies at Manchester University. He is currently a member of the Australian Business Ethics Network , working on business, institutional, and personal ethics.

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