As a California voter, Vice President Kamala Harris has decisions to make about state policy measures that will appear on her November ballot — some of which reflect national challenges she could face if elected president.
California votersâ€
Harrisâ€
As the vice president works to introduce herself to voters during a compressed campaign, a glimpse into how she might vote on issues in her home state could add to votersâ€
The California and Florida ballot measures “certainly speak to larger issues … that, as president, Trump or Harris would absolutely have direct influence over,� said Garrick Percival, a political science professor at San José State University. “So these things matter.�
Wading into down-ballot battles can come with political risks for candidates though, particularly if itâ€
When Trump — who has historically contradicted himself on abortion — indicated he might support the Florida amendment, he faced swift backlash from antiabortion groups. A day later, he said he would oppose the ballot measure.
“You saw the disaster that followed when Trump spoke out against the Florida [amendment],� said Trish Crouse, a political science professor at the University of New Haven. “He found himself having to backtrack and reexplain himself.�
For Harris — who has deep roots in California as a former U.S. senator, state attorney general and San Francisco district attorney — the politics surrounding the sentencing initiative, known as Proposition 36, poses a challenge, analysts said.
The measure would allow felony charges and longer prison sentences for some drug and retail theft cases, rolling back parts of an initiative passed in 2014, when Harris was Californiaâ€
Proponents argue that reinstating harsher punishments will curb shoplifting, drug use and homelessness, though data shows that the existing lesser penalties did not lead to crime increases in most areas. Opponents say it will increase incarceration rates without solving any societal problems.
Public concern about crime, partly driven by the difficult pandemic recovery of some California cities, has led to wide support for Prop 36.
“Harris has not taken a stance … and itâ€
The debate is emblematic of the challenges Harris faces on the presidential campaign trail in satisfying a wide range of voters on crime and other divisive issues, analysts said. As in California, public perception of worsening crime has driven the political discussion — despite national data showing that crime is generally dropping. Democrats feel pressure to appear responsive, more so than in 2020, when George Floydâ€
Trump, who has long delivered exaggerated and inaccurate descriptions of crime in U.S. cities despite it falling rapidly, has pledged to aggressively crack down on crime if elected again. Harris has to deliver “a more nuanced case,â€� said Howard Lavine, a University of Minnesota political science professor. “Democrats tend to want to balance social justice and the punishment of crime,â€� but the undecided voters Harris needs to woo may be more likely to align with “Republicansâ€
Harris has emphasized her background as a prosecutor on the campaign trail, often telling voters: “I took on perpetrators of all kinds. Predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain.�
Californiaâ€
Voters will examine whether the state should borrow $10 billion for climate change response programs, including steps to confront wildfires and sea level rise — a funding question faced across the nation as record-breaking disasters, and their high costs, come one after another.
Hurricane Helene has put that issue in the spotlight as Southern states face devastation and a need for massive cleanup. Harris, who has supported government funding to address problems such as flooding and extreme heat, traveled to Georgia on Wednesday, where she told residents that federal officials were committed to helping “for the long haul.�
Also on Californiaâ€
The outcome could further test how voters are feeling about criminal justice and reparations, a topic that Harris hasnâ€
Another question, Proposition 35, deals with how to spend special tax revenue for Medi-Cal, the stateâ€
Harris isnâ€
“Like everyone else, they have every right to keep their votes private,â€� Crouse said of politicians. “If itâ€