Jobs
Harris says college degrees not always needed for highly skilled jobs
The vice president reaches out to non-college-educated voters in battleground stops.
Democratic Party nominee Kamala Harris is promising to reassess which federal jobs require a college degree if elected as United States president.
Harris was campaigning in Michigan on Monday and told workers at a semiconductor facility in Saginaw County that the country needed to change the idea that certain jobs require college degrees.
“We need to get in front of this idea that only high-skilled jobs require college degrees,” said Harris, promising she would tackle this on “day one” of her presidency.
“One of the things immediately is to reassess federal jobs, and I have already started looking at it, to look at which ones don’t require a college degree,” she said. “Because here is the thing: That’s not the only qualification for a qualified worker.”
Education divide
Harris’s comments reflect Democrats’ efforts to bridge the political divide in the country between college-educated and non-college-educated voters. Democrats are trying to attract support from the latter group, which now tend to vote Republican.
Last month, Harris introduced proposed economic policies aimed at spurring domestic manufacturing.
Her visit to the Hemlock Semiconductor plant in central Michigan was to highlight the Democrats’ efforts to build up the US semiconductor industry. The company recently received a $325m federal grant for a new factory from the new CHIPS and Science Act.
Republican candidate Donald Trump has been critical of the law, blasting it during a lengthy interview on The Joe Rogan Experience on Friday. “That deal is so bad,” Trump said on the podcast, adding that the subsidies went to “rich companies”.
But Harris said the country has to be willing to balance its economic traditions and the jobs that go with it, with the need to push for new technology.
“When we understand who we are as a nation, we take great pride in being a leader on so many things. And we have a tradition of that,” she said. “But I think that what we know as Americans is that we cannot rest on tradition.”
She added: “We have to constantly be on top of what is happening, what is current, and investing in the industries of the future, as well as honouring the traditions and the industries that have built up America’s economy.”
Trump ‘fixated’ on himself
Harris also took a shot at Trump before she flew to Michigan. She told reporters that Trump’s rally at Madison Square Garden helped prove her point about what was at stake in the election.
Harris said the Sunday event “really highlighted the point I’ve been making throughout this campaign”, which is that Trump is “fixated on his grievances, on himself, and on dividing our country, and it is not in any way something that will strengthen the American family, the American worker”.
Trump held a rally at Madison Square Garden on Sunday where several speakers made racist and crude remarks, including comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who described Puerto Rico as “a floating island of garbage”.
Harris plans to deliver her closing campaign argument on Tuesday in Washington, DC.
“There’s a big difference between he and I,” she said.