Georgia vote gives Harris reprieve as Senate tiebreaker

Vice President Kamala Harris needed to get to the US Senate to break a tie. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Wednesday that his caucus has been deeply grateful for Harris constant schedule juggling. Its part of her job.


PTI | Washington DC | Updated: 08-12-2022 11:29 IST | Created: 08-12-2022 11:27 IST
Georgia vote gives Harris reprieve as Senate tiebreaker
US Vice President Kamala Harris Image Credit: ANI
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Vice President Kamala Harris needed to get to the US Senate to break a tie. But first she had to avoid causing a traffic jam. One more senator had to vote before Harris could end the impasse, and he was in Georgetown, on the opposite side of Washington. If Harris left in her motorcade, street closures would likely cut off his route to Capitol Hill. So she waited.

“I was on the phone with the senator's staff telling them, you have to tell me when he's in the car and when he's crossed the threshold through downtown,'' Kristine Lucius, former director of legislative affairs for Harris, recalled about the vote on an administration nominee last year.

Such has been the delicate balancing act for Harris, whose role as president of the Senate has been a defining feature of her first two years in office. With the help of careful scheduling - and even an eye on traffic patterns when necessary - she's swiftly outpaced her predecessors when it comes to breaking ties.

Now the pressure will be off. Sen. Raphael Warnock's victory in the Georgia runoff means Democrats will expand their majority to 51 seats. Although Harris may still get called upon, such as when senators are absent, the party will have a little more breathing room on close votes. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said Wednesday that his caucus “has been deeply grateful” for Harris' “constant schedule juggling.” “It's part of her job. But I think she's done a lot of other good things,” he said. ''And now she's going to have a little more time to do those things. Because the need for her to be here will be less.” Vice presidents have an infamously sparse job description under the Constitution, and one of their only responsibilities is serving as president of the Senate. It's been a mostly ceremonial role in recent administrations. President Joe Biden didn't have to break a single tie in his eight years as vice president. Harris, a former senator from California, has had a much more hands-on experience because the chamber has been evenly divided in an era of sharp partisanship. A dozen nominees would not have been confirmed without her vote. She also helped nudge the American Rescue Plan, a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief measure, and the Inflation Reduction Act, the centerpiece of Biden's domestic agenda, over the finish line. All told, she's cast 26 tiebreaking votes. John C. Calhoun, who served as vice president under John Quincy Adams and Andrew Jackson, has the record for 31 - but that's over the course of nearly eight years, rather than Harris' two. ''Floating holds” limiting travel were built into Harris' schedule weeks in advance when there was a chance she would be needed on Capitol Hill, preventing her from straying far from Washington.

When she did travel, she tended to go on Mondays, Thursdays or Fridays because most Senate votes were on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. And short hops to Baltimore or Richmond were preferable to flights around the country, which would make rushing back for a vote logistically complicated. Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., said, “Any time we were here, she had to be ready, because even things that might have seemed noncontroversial, appointments and stuff, could deadlock.” Harris was “never completely free to make other plans,” he said. One of the exceptions was the Munich Security Conference in February, which Harris attended shortly before Russia invaded Ukraine. “As soon as that was booked, the first person I talked to was not my husband about child care coverage, it was the majority leader's chief of staff,” Lucius said. She had to make sure that Schumer knew he couldn't schedule any tight votes then, “because that's not something that you can fly home from.” Sometimes there's a scheduling conflict. Harris was in Los Angeles for the Summit of the Americas when the Senate held a confirmation vote for a Labour Department official. The nomination unexpectedly stalled without Harris available to break a tie, so Democrats tried again in September. They were successful, and Harris wasn't even needed as a tiebreaker. “She's been here when we need her,'' said Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash. ''We've accommodated her when it didn't work out.” Murray appreciates Harris' trips to Capitol Hill for another reason besides tiebreakers. They're opportunities to chat policy, from school buses to maternal health, with someone who is a heartbeat away from the presidency. “It's a connection you don't often get with a vice president,'' she said.

Joel K. Goldstein, a historian of the vice presidency, said Harris' responsibility can be rewarding and frustrating. “The upside is, she gets to be there when there's something that's important, and she casts a decisive vote,'' he said. “The downside is, she has to be there.'' After all, the vice presidency can be a political springboard, and remaining tethered to Senate procedure is not usually an ambitious leader's idea of a plum assignment. But the perils of not being available have been apparent before, such as when the Senate was considering President Calvin Coolidge's nominee for attorney general in 1925.

Believing he wasn't needed, Vice President Charles G. Dawes went to his hotel room for a nap. When he woke up, it was too late to rescue the nomination with a tiebreaking vote.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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