Harris flexes power as Senate tiebreaker
(CNN)Early Friday morning, Vice President Kamala Harris did something Joe Biden never did in his eight years as vice president -- cast a tie-breaking vote.
Her
first ever -- coming before sunrise in Washington at 5:13 a.m. ET
Friday -- pushed through an amendment during the Senate's vote-a-rama.
Twenty-one minutes later, she broke a tie a second time, flexing her new
power as the president of the Senate on a budget resolution unlocking the ability for Democrats to pass a Covid-19 relief package without Republican support.
"I
was there voting at 5:00 this morning," Harris said during a roundtable
with local Black Chambers of Commerce later on Friday. "It was
enjoyable to be there."
Still,
Harris has expressed some reluctance about her tie-breaking role as the
White House hopes bipartisanship will thrive in Congress.
"Since
our nation's founding, only 268 tie-breaking votes have been cast by a
Vice President. I intend to work tirelessly as your Vice President,
including, if necessary, fulfilling this Constitutional duty," she wrote
before taking office. "At the same time, it is my hope that rather than
come to the point of a tie, the Senate will instead find common ground
and do the work of the American people."
Competing demands?
But
there's also the real possibility that the demand for Harris as a
tie-breaker could tether her to the Senate, placing a strain on her
schedule and duties as vice president if she's often needed on Capitol
Hill.
"You
can't be in the room at the White House if you have to be down at
Capitol Hill to break a tie vote. You can't be traveling around the
world to meet with leaders on the international stage, or you can't be
traveling domestically," Joel Goldstein, a vice presidential historian,
said. "It can work havoc with the vice president's calendar."
"That's
a problem vice presidents don't have when the Senate is not evenly
divided, or when their party can count on cross-party votes to get the
margins that they need," he added.
Presiding
over the Senate is a duty assigned to the vice president in the
Constitution, and with it, comes the power of breaking any ties in the
chamber. With today's Senate evenly split at 50-50, the chances of
Harris making that 1.2 mile journey from the White House to the Capitol
to serve as the tie-breaker are high.
Within
the past week, Harris made four trips to the Capitol -- once to pay
respects to fallen Capitol Hill Police Officer Brian Sicknick, who was
killed in the January 6 riot and laid in honor in the building's
rotunda, and three times to be on standby to be the deciding vote in the
Senate.
In
the past, Harris' predecessor, former Vice President Mike Pence,
delayed a trip to the Middle East in 2017 to stay nearby as the Senate
voted on a tax package. His vote ultimately wasn't needed, but Pence did
go on to cast 13 tie-breaking votes -- a record for a modern-day vice
president.
Dick
Cheney, the last vice president to serve during an evenly split Senate,
had eight-tie breaking votes, while former Vice President Al Gore had
four.
"Every time I vote, we win," Gore joked in 1994. "It's a very encouraging phenomenon."
Despite
his deep affinity for the traditions of the Senate, Biden never cast
one tie-breaking vote while serving as vice president, but he remained a
frequent presence on Capitol Hill throughout his eight years in the
Obama White House, often in the role of negotiator.
Chocolates and a warm fire: Harris mingles with Senate colleagues
Harris
arrived in the Senate Thursday night bearing White House chocolates for
her Senate colleagues on both sides of the aisle, a White House aide
said. The vice president later huddled around a warm fire in her Senate
office with some senators, including Republican Sen. Roy Blunt of
Missouri and Democratic Sen. Raphael Warnock of Georgia.
She
also ceremonially swore-in Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla of California,
her replacement, and Democratic Sen. Pat Leahy of Vermont, who will
serve as President Pro Tempore of the Senate.
While
Biden has leaned on his decades of relationships and experience on
Capitol Hill in negotiations, Harris is newer to the Washington scene,
having served four years in the Senate before moving on to the White
House. But her visits to Capitol Hill could provide her opportunities to
further build relationships with the senators who could be key to
advancing the White House's agenda.
Senate Democrats are welcoming her expected presence on Capitol Hill as it cements their majority.
"There
are times where she may have to be nearby or even be there because we
don't know what a vote is going to be, sometimes," Sen. Amy Klobuchar of
Minnesota said. "It's going to be more important than ever given the
close close Senate, where we are literally a tie."
After
a brief trip home, the vice president returned to the Senate around
3:30 a.m. ET Friday ahead of the final stretch of the vote-a-rama. She
watched the floor debate from her Senate office and wrote notes to
Senate colleagues. This included a congratulatory message to Ann Berry,
the first Black person to serve as secretary of the Senate.
Shortly
after 5 am, Harris walked to the chamber to preside over the Senate for
three votes, casting tiebreakers for two, with the final one coming at
5:34 a.m.
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