NEW YORK — Kamala Harris wanted to help voters get to know her better with a cascade of media appearances Tuesday, but the most lasting impression might have been her unwillingness to break with Joe Biden.
Asked on ABC's ''The View'' how she would be different from the president she's served under for four years, Harris said ''we're obviously two different people'' and ''I will bring those sensibilities to how I lead.''
However, she was not able to identify a decision where she would have gone another way. ''There is not a thing that comes to mind,'' Harris said.
The exchange encapsulated Harris' struggle to portray herself as a candidate who can deliver the change voters crave while also remaining loyal to the current administration. Some Harris aides privately winced as gleeful Republicans swiftly circulated clips of her response and Donald Trump swiped at her in a social media post, calling it ''her dumbest answer so far.''
It wasn't until later in the show that Harris named something that she would do differently than Biden — she would put a Republican in her Cabinet.
The Democratic nominee said she would welcome contributions from the other party ''because I don't feel burdened by letting pride get in the way of a good idea.''
The interview was a reminder that friendly media venues — the women of ''The View'' were nearly rapturous in their embrace of Harris — can be as treacherous for politicians to navigate as hardball journalistic interrogations. And it came at a delicate moment for Harris, whose motorcade whisked her from studio to studio in New York on Tuesday.
She faced a similar question during a taping of CBS' ''The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, who asked Harris ''what would the major changes be" from Biden. She offered nothing other than saying ''I'm obviously not Joe Biden, so that would be one change" — then emphasized that she's also not Trump.