2024 election

What to Know About Kamala Harris’s Policy Proposals

Vice President Harris Holds Bilateral Meeting With Visiting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu Of Israel
Photo: Kenny Holston-Pool/Getty Images

Vice-President Kamala Harris has a very short window to define her presidential campaign before voters head to the polls on November 5. Since President Joe Biden abandoned his reelection bid, she’s been zooming from state to state introducing herself to the public, securing the Democratic nomination, and picking her running mate. But what is her platform, exactly? So far, Harris has been riffing on certain Biden administration policies during campaign speeches. At the Democratic National Convention, she outlined her general vision for the future of the country. But she has yet to deliver specifics on some of the proposals she’s rolled out on her own. Below, everything we know so far about where Harris stands on the issues.

The economy

Harris’s first major policy speech focused on several economic proposals. She announced a goal to build 3 million new housing units in four years, proposing $40 billion in tax incentives for home builders to accomplish it. Harris also said she’d ask Congress to pass legislation giving buyers up to $25,000 toward a down payment on their first home.

In other campaign speeches, Harris has said she supports raising the minimum wage and that she’ll work to ban hidden fees and surprise late charges that banks “use to pad their profits.”  She also vows to protect consumers by pushing a federal ban on corporate price gouging in the grocery and food industries.

Harris also rolled out another policy proposal focused on supporting small businesses. She is calling for expanding the eligible start-up expenses deduction from $5,000 to $50,000, ensuring that one-third of federal contract dollars goes to small businesses and boosting investment in community development financial institutions (CDFIs), which typically support low-income, minority, and rural business owners who don’t have access to traditional lenders.

When it comes to taxes, she is proposing that lower-income adults who do not have children see an expansion of their earned income-tax credit (more on her proposals for those who do have children below). Additionally, Harris’s campaign has said she will not raise taxes on people making less than $400,000 per year and that she’ll help eliminate taxes on tips for service and hospitality workers. Harris also is proposing higher taxes on the wealthy and corporations, including increasing the tax on stock buybacks to 4 percent. She’s said she wants to raise the long-term capital-gains tax rate from 20 percent to 28 percent for individuals who earn $1 million or more. She also supports President Biden’s Billionaire Minimum Income Tax plan, which would impose a 25 percent minimum income tax on households with net worths over $100 million.

Abortion and reproductive rights

Harris has been the Biden administration’s most vocal advocate on abortion rights. As vice-president, she’s regularly met with stakeholders across the country and became the highest-ranking government official ever to visit an abortion clinic. She has campaigned on defending “reproductive freedom” and said that she’d sign a bill to codify Roe v. Wade’s protections into law. She also supports the repeal of the Hyde Amendment, which bans the use of federal funds for abortion care with very limited exceptions.

Harris has also said she’ll fight to protect the right to contraception and access to fertility care such as in vitro fertilization, both of which Republicans have targeted post-Roe, though she has yet to outline specifics on what that’d look like.

Child care

As vice-president, Harris has been the Biden administration’s lead on a policy seeking to lower child-care costs for more than 100,000 low-income families. Now, she’s proposing a child tax-credit expansion, where low- and middle-income families can receive up to $6,000 during the first year of their new baby’s life. She also wants to bring back a credit from the Biden administration’s 2021 American Rescue Plan that gave families $3,600 per child under the age of 5 and $3,000 for children who are older.

Voting rights

During her speech, Harris promised to work with Congress to pass the John Lewis Voting Rights Act and the Freedom to Vote Act, an ambitious measure aimed at strengthening the protections of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Some of the bill’s provisions include expanding automatic and same-day voting registration, making Election Day a national holiday, ending partisan gerrymandering, and protecting against voter purges.

Health care

Harris has pledged to continue the Biden administration’s efforts to negotiate lower prescription-drug prices for Medicare patients. Some of her other proposals include limiting the price of insulin at $35 for every patient, not just seniors, as well as capping out-of-pocket expenses for prescription drugs at $2,000 per year. Harris has also said she will partner with states to cancel medical debt for millions of Americans, although it’s not yet clear who’d qualify. As vice-president, she led the charge to remove medical debt from credit reports, an effort that benefitted about 30 million people.

Gun safety

In campaign speeches, Harris has said she will work with Congress to pass several gun-safety measures, including universal background checks, red-flag laws, and a ban on assault weapons. She’s been a key leader in the Biden administration on this issue. In that role, she’s overseen the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention, announced the launch of a national center to help implement red-flag laws, and helped roll out a policy to crack down on unlicensed gun dealers.

Immigration

In campaign ads, Harris has pledged that her immigration policies include “strong border security and an earned pathway to citizenship.” Her proposals include increasing the number of border-patrol agents, investing in technology to crack down on fentanyl, and increasing funding to stop human trafficking. She has also said she would work with Congress to revive a bipartisan border-security bill that would allow the president to shut down the border after a certain number of migrants enter the country, allocate funds to hire new asylum officers, and expedite the process for ruling on asylum claims. Republicans killed the measure earlier this year at the urging of Donald Trump, who didn’t want President Biden to notch another bipartisan victory.

Criminal justice

Harris, a former prosecutor, has yet to release any criminal justice proposals. Her record on the issue is complicated. As San Francisco’s district attorney, she vowed not to seek the death penalty; later, when she was elected as California’s attorney general, her office argued that the death penalty should stand and appealed a court ruling that would effectively end capital punishment in the state.

Harris has long backed initiatives that would offer alternatives to incarceration for people convicted of nonviolent crimes. As DA, she implemented a program called “Back on Track” that focused on curbing recidivism among first-time nonviolent offenders by helping them with job training and mental-health counseling. As a senator, she also supported a bipartisan bill that would end cash bail and another that would reform policing following George Floyd’s killing. As vice-president, she and Biden have pushed Congress to pass a federal police-reform bill named in Floyd’s honor.

Foreign policy

Harris has yet to unveil concrete foreign-policy proposals. As the war in Gaza continues to be a key issue for voters, Harris has said that while she believes Israel has a right to defend itself, she has “serious concern about the scale of human suffering in Gaza, including the death of far too many innocent civilians.” And though she recently clashed with pro-Palestine protesters who interrupted a rally in Michigan, she also briefly met with leaders of the Uncommitted Movement before the event to discuss their call for an arms embargo on Israel.

In her speech, Harris explicitly called for a cease-fire and a hostage deal, adding that she’s working with President Biden to end the war. She also spoke more forcefully about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. Here are her comments in full:

Let me be clear: I will always stand up for Israel’s right to defend itself, and I will always ensure Israel has the ability to defend itself. Because the people of Israel must never again face the horror that the terrorist organization Hamas caused on October 7, including unspeakable sexual violence and the massacre of young people at a music festival.


At the same time, what has happened in Gaza over the past ten months is devastating. So many innocent lives lost. Desperate, hungry people fleeing for safety, over and over again. The scale of suffering is heartbreaking.


President Biden and I are working to end this war such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released, the suffering in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can realize their right to dignity. Security. Freedom. And self-determination.

What to Know About Kamala Harris’s Policy Proposals