Now that Joe Biden has won the presidency, one thing is sure: by picking Sen. Kamala Harris of California as his vice president, Biden has thrust immigration policy back into the national spotlight.

Harris has an inspirational family story: the daughter of Indian and Jamaican immigrants, she has risen in a single generation to stand on the brink of America’s second-highest office. In a sign of the divisions that now mark American society, however, President Donald Trump and others quickly began spreading conspiracy theories falsely claiming that as the child of immigrants, Harris was ineligible for the vice presidency.

The President has since backed away from those claims, but a bigger question remains: what does Harris’s selection say about how Biden will handle immigration policy come January?

In any previous cycle, Harris would have been a remarkably progressive running-mate. In the era of Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Julián Castro, however, she looks like a relatively moderate choice. So what does Biden’s decision reveal about his plans — and could Harris’s advice prompt Biden to rethink any of his existing positions?

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For the fiscal year ended May 31, 2005, revenues increased 12 percent to $13.7 billion, compared to $12.3 billion in fiscal year 2004. Changes in currency exchange rates contributed three percentage points of this growth, while the acquisition of Converse and Starter added one point. Full year net income was up 28 percent to $1.2 billion, or $4.48 per diluted share, versus $945.6 million, or $3.51 per diluted share, in 2004.

Client

Delta

Release Date

Feb 2019

Role

App Design