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The Harris show: Democratic convention a prime-time debut for surprise nominee

Kamala Harris takes the biggest stage in U.S. politics at this week's Democratic convention. She's vaulted into presidential contention, and won plaudits for her performance. There are, however, hurdles ahead.

U.S. Vice-President Kamala Harris cements her switch from understudy to top of the ticket

Woman in shiny blue room with T shirt that says
The Democratic convention, starting Monday, will be the first time in 56 years that a U.S. vice-president becomes party nominee because the sitting president quit the race. (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

There's an old joke about politics inKamala Harris's home state, where election campaigns, for various reasons, rarely ever include large political rallies.

"A California political rally is three people standing around a television set," says Dan Schnur, a political communications professor at the University of Southern California, sharing the classicgag.

His point being that the U.S. vice-president had little experience addressing boisterous partisan crowds until just a few years ago.

That's doubly true given hercareer trajectory, which consisted mainly of being a prosecutor, and thenher state's top justice official, one of the less-partisan roles in government.

What a remarkable transformation this week will underscore.

She is headlining a marquee event in American politics, the Democratic convention in Chicago, that begins Monday and culminates three nights later with her accepting her party's presidential nomination.

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It's a politically critical audition: A moment to present her case to a country that might not know her, or her policies, especially well.

"There's a real TBD element here that we're all watching," says Christopher Cadelago, who has covered Harris for years as a longtime political reporter in California. Heis now Politico's bureau chief in the vice-president'shome state.

She has yet to undergo key testsof a traditional campaign due to her unusually late entry into the race: No sit-down media interviews or debates so far, and she's only just started unveiling a platform.

What's clear is her party is suddenly more enthused. Since U.S. President Joe Biden's retirement announcement, Democrats are enjoying better polls, drawing bigger crowds, and raising far more money.

WATCH goes behind the scenes at the DNC:

Behind the scenes at the Democratic National Convention

17 days ago
Duration 1:50
CBCs Katie Simpson takes us behind the scenes at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, where Democrats are gathering to welcome Kamala Harris as the partys presidential candidate.

Some credit Harris's performance on the stump. Many in her own party have been surprised by her in one respect: Her public speeches.

"She's exceeded expectations," said Bruce Cain, a political scientist at California's Stanford University.

"You're going to find a lot of people in California saying, 'Oh wow we never noticed that about her.'"

Harris and husband leave plane
Kamala Harris arrived in Chicago on Sunday, exiting her plane with her husband Doug Emhoff. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)

Cain credits the stage experience she's gained as vice-president, after less than one term in the U.S. Senate. "Her four years [as VP] were used wisely," he said.

Now here's what we don't know: Her full platform, and how well she'll sell it in unscripted moments, like her upcoming debate against Donald Trump on Sept. 10.

She has jettisoned promises from her ill-fated 2020 primary campaign, where she vied for progressive voteswithout success.

Harris no longer talks about banning oil fracking; ending private health insurance; reducing police budgets; or extending public benefits to undocumented migrants.

That speaks to the scouting report on Harris from a retired reporter from California who knows her: Very smart, very friendly and, when it comes to issues, "a bit of a weathervane."

"She could change her mind if the polls aren't with her," says Hank Plante, a now-retired San Francisco TV reporter.

Man looks at phone near big shiny blue stage that says DNC 2024
Preparations underway Sunday at the United Center in Chicago, venue of the Democratic convention that begins Monday. (Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)

Her policies: What we know

This hardly makes her unique in politics. Look no further than Trump whoused to be pro-choice, then appointed U.S. Supreme Court judges who ended the constitutional right to an abortion.

In Plante's view, it's also a positiveattribute to adjust your politics tothe moment: "She's smart enough to do that," he said.

At her ideological core, he said, Harris is a traditional California liberal: left of centre on issues, a believer in minority rights, but not quite a progressive.

We'll know more about the rest of her program soon. She promises to roll out her other economic policies within a few weeks.

She's just released parts related to lowering living costs. The mere act of putting out some policy meat gave her opponents a new political bone to chew on.

Some parts of her cost-of-living plan were well-received or uncontroversial. For example, she wants to reintroduce, and expand, a child-tax credit (a bit like the one Canada has) which existed temporarily as part of Biden's pandemic-relief law. She will also push Congress to pass tax incentives for home construction, and use existing competition lawsto block grocery-industry mergers that might limit consumer choices.

Other partsof her agenda are more hotly disputed.

Her proposed $25,000 US for first-time homebuyers has drawn some pushback with critics contendingit would justdrain public money, and increase home prices.

But by far the most hotly contested is among the least detailed: A vaguely worded promise to advance the first-ever federal ban on price-gouging for food.

It's been likened to the failed price controls of the 1970s; criticized even by sympathetic analysts on the left; and has the Trump campaign calling her nothing less than a communist.

WATCH | Harris promises Americans economic relief:

Harris promises Americans economic relief, accuses Trump of serving the rich

20 days ago
Duration 2:03
U.S. vice-president and Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris promised a ban on food price-gouging and more economic opportunities for the middle class at a North Carolina campaign event where she accused her Republican rival Donald Trump of serving the billionaire class.

A puzzling thing about this debate is its utter lack of clarity about what she's proposing, whether it takes a law in Congress, whether it has any chance of becoming law.

And, frankly, how any of this is different from price-gouging laws that already existwhich have already been enforced in different places, including in the not-remotely-communist state of Texas.

Trump himself targeted price-gouging in medical goods during the pandemic.

Harris might have a chance to explain this in more detail if, or when, she sits for a media interview, or in her debate next month with Trump.

Police officers keep a crowd of protesters at bay.
Huge demonstrations are planned in Chicago, including this one Sunday. Some protests promise to be peaceful, others not. (Marco Bello/Reuters)

Which parallel: 1992or 1968?

She did debate on occasion in her early political career. In fact, she may owe her political survival to a moment from a debate in the 2010 race for California attorney general.

Her Republican opponent answered, honestly, that he intended to double-dip in his public salary: to keep collecting a prosecutor's pension, atop the $150,000 US he'd earn as AG. He said he'd earned it, then called the $150,000 salary "incredibly low."

Her team made an attack ad out of it.

This almost certainly made the difference given howclose he race was;her opponent even accidentally declared victory on election night, and the San Francisco Chronicle reported the wrong result.It took weeks to name Harris the winner.

"The rest is history," Cadelago said.

Her encounter with history, however, follows a miserable 2020 presidential run, whenHarris dropped out before the 2020 calendar year even started.

Contemplating thatdisastrous pastrace, Cain bringsup another young political star who flopped in his first foray onthe national stage.

Bill Clinton gave a boring, interminable speech at the 1988 Democratic convention where the crowd talked over him and pundits declared his career over.

Four years later, he was elected as the 42nd president and was heralded as a stellar orator.

As for whether Harris has the potential to enjoy that upward trajectory, Cain said, we'll know soon enough: "She certainly has improved enormously."

It's a far more enviable historical precedent than what happened to another Democrat in 1968.

Hubert Humphrey was also vice-president, like Harris. His boss, Lyndon Johnson, alsocancelled his re-election campaign, and he replaced him. The convention was also held in Chicago.

It was marred by anti-war protests and a violent police response. Humphrey left the convention a damaged candidate he trailedin the polls, his party was divided.

"Chicago was a catastrophe," Humphrey later told author Theodore White.

On a week where Gaza antiwar protests are planned in Chicago some promising a family-friendly atmosphere, others urging violent confrontation with cops we'll soon learn which historical parallel rings truer.

Standoff in black and white photo between cops and protesters
The historical parallel that Democrats dread: Chicago 1968. (The Associated Press)