Programming Note: Playbook will be off next week, but we’ll be back in your inboxes on Monday, July 29. To keep following our reporting on this historic political moment, read our continued California coverage here and subscribe to POLITICO Pro. THE BUZZ: VEEP WATCH — If Joe Biden steps aside, many lawmakers and party delegates see Vice President Kamala Harris as Democrats' inevitable nominee. And that means far more eyes on her origin story. But to understand Harris’ rise as the first Black, Asian American and female vice president, it’s necessary to look hard at how the Golden State shaped her political trajectory and instincts. POLITICO’s California team huddled to brainstorm how Harris has been shaped by her time in California politics. (After all, we’re the reporters who’ve watched Harris’ career at every stage: from San Francisco district attorney to state attorney general, and later, California senator and VP.) Check out today’s story from Lara, Melanie Mason and Jeremy B. White for a must-read, in-depth look at Harris’ life. Among the key highlights: — The death penalty case that haunts her: Harris was district attorney when a San Francisco police officer, Isaac Espinoza, was killed by a gunman wielding an AK-47 in 2004. She opted to seek life in prison, but not the death penalty (a stance consistent with her opposition to capital punishment). But Harris’ handling of the decision, which she announced days after Espinoza’s murder, would stick with her. Even the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein rebuked her decision, when she called for the death penalty as she spoke at Espinoza’s funeral. The saga, many political observers argue, led to Harris’ overly cautious tendencies. Harris is a moderate on criminal justice issues, and her support for police often riled progressive activists in San Francisco and during her 2019 campaign for president. But the Espinoza murder is an area where her record would likely be criticized by Republicans seeking to capitalize on voters’ frustrations about crime, if she ran for election instead of Biden. — She took on oil companies: As the state’s attorney general, Harris regularly sued large fossil-fuel companies, amassing $50 million in settlements. She even sued the Obama-Biden administration over an environmental assessment that created a path for fracking off the coast. Harris campaigned on her environmental record as a 2020 presidential candidate, seeking to appeal to climate-conscious, young voters. But she quickly embraced Biden’s support for fracking after she was tapped for VP. That stance would certainly be scrutinized. — She shares a similar orbit with Newsom: Harris and Gov. Gavin Newsom both came up through the rough-and-tumble world of San Francisco politics in the early 2000s. While they've generally avoided direct competition with one another, the two have shared a parallel path, including the same group of supporters and mega donors. They even have a common mentor: former Assembly speaker and Mayor Willie Brown, a political kingmaker in SF for decades. Brown, whom Harris dated in the mid-1990s, helped her and Newsom both get footholds in city politics by appointing them to powerful city boards. GOOD MORNING. Happy Friday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook. You can text us at 916-562-0685 — save it as “CA Playbook” in your contacts. Or drop us a line at lkorte@politico.com and dgardiner@politico.com, or on X — @DustinGardiner and @Lara_Korte. WHERE’S GAVIN? Nothing official announced; in meetings and briefings all day, per his staff. TWEET OF THE DAY: Maria Shriver, a journalist and former first lady of California, on rumblings that Biden could soon exit the presidential race.
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