Headline Roundup • October 29th, 2024
How Would a Harris Presidency Differ From Biden's?
Summary from the AllSides News Team
Vice President Kamala Harris was forced to run a truncated campaign after President Joe Biden dropped out. One key question some voters still have is: how would she differ from Biden?
From the Center: According to a Wall Street Journal (Center bias) poll, 54% of voters say Harris would largely continue Biden’s approach and policies, while 41% said she would bring fresh ideas and new leadership. The WSJ writers added, "The polling data underscores Harris’s challenges in convincing Americans that she would serve as a break from Biden, who received favorable job approval ratings from about four in 10 voters."
From the Left: Politico (Lean Left) parsed how Harris differs from Biden on several key issues. She is stronger on abortion rights, wants to limit state restrictions, supports the Green New Deal, opposes the Trans-Pacific trade partnership, supports free college for most students, supports government regulation of artificial intelligence, and has been strong on animal welfare.
From the Right: Several voices on the right have pointed out that when Harris was asked what she would do differently from Biden in an interview on The View, she said, "There is not a thing that comes to mind." Others have argued that she would be more radical, especially on economic issues, where she has made proposals to ban price gouging, which the right has called price controls.
Featured Coverage of this Story
Republican Gov. Mike DeWine extended Ohio’s first-in-the-nation ballot deadline to allow Democrats until September to nominate their presidential candidate this year, solving a filing date technicality that had seemed to threaten President Joe Biden’s Buckeye State ballot status. Still, Democratic power brokers have proceeded as though the Democratic National Committee has only until Aug. 7 to formalize their general election ticket.
So even though Biden is polling worse than any Democratic presidential candidate — much less, an incumbent — against a Republican challenger in 20 years, the Democratic Party seems slated to ignore the majority of...
President Joe Biden’s decision to abandon his reelection bid and endorse Vice President Kamala Harris means that Harris could soon become the standard-bearer for the Democratic Party’s biggest priorities — including abortion rights, climate change and student debt relief.
Her track record as a California attorney general, a U.S. senator and Biden’s No. 2 provides only so many clues about how she might lead.

Photo: Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
Vice President Kamala Harris has presented herself as the candidate who will help the nation “turn the page” and chart a “new way forward” after a tumultuous period marked by polarization under former President Donald Trump.
But three months after she replaced President Biden atop the Democratic ticket, Harris has struggled to explain how she would differ from him and their unpopular administration—and voters have noticed.
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