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Kamala Harris launched her presidential campaign on January 27 with a speech that unveiled her new campaign slogan: “For the People.” Harris made use of this tagline early and often, wielding it as a clever link between the present and the past—between her current aspiration to represent the people of the United States as president and her long public career, about which, she said, “My whole life, I’ve only had one client: the people.” This claim to represent “the people” is not unusual for a career prosecutor—Harris was both a local district attorney and California’s state attorney general, and California is one of several states that officially designates the prosecution as “the People” in criminal court. But it is a deeply misguided claim—one that misunderstands the role of a prosecutor and risks undermining any larger goal of fighting mass incarceration or reforming the criminal-legal system. Ad Policy

When a prosecutor stands up in court and calls herself “the People” in the same sentence that she requests that an individual person be given a criminal record, or separated from their family and loved ones by jail or prison, that naming of “the People” cements in our minds the problematic idea that individuals who are prosecuted are not part of the people who matter when it comes to politics. Nor are their loved ones and supporters. As I’ve written elsewhere, the prosecutor’s claim of speaking “for the People” reinforces the ways in which we exclude entire neighborhoods from political participation via the practices of mass prosecution and mass incarceration: More than 6 million people with criminal records cannot vote, and they and their families and neighbors interact with the police, courts, and jails every day in ways that signal to them that they are second-class citizens. As social scientists have shown, the mass policing, supervision, and incarceration of communities of color results directly in the diminished political power of entire neighborhoods.

We should abandon the idea that prosecutors act “for the People,” eliminating it from formal case captions and colloquial speech alike. Instead, it is more honest to designate prosecutors as “the State,” “the Commonwealth,” or “the Government”: they are state actors, wielding their state power to prosecute individual defendants. We might view them as a necessary part of the role of the state, but when they act, they do so against part of the people as much as for them.

Calling an individual prosecutor “the People” sends a powerful message: a message that defendants are not part of “the People,” are not part of the subset of human beings that we should care about. And the notion of prosecutors as “the People” creates harm well beyond the courtroom, excluding marginalized communities from larger public debates about the purposes of criminal law and definition of justice. In this way, the idea that Harris, and all prosecutors, represent “the People” is in direct conflict with another one of the promises that Harris makes early on in her speech: “to be conscious and compassionate about the struggles of all people.”

So, what should Kamala Harris do? By all means, she should aspire to be a presidential candidate who acts “for the people” at all times. But she should also recognize that she did not represent all people when she was a prosecutor. Indeed, she has come under fire for her overzealousness in contributing to mass incarceration as a prosecutor, including by withholding exculpatory evidence, challenging the release of those exonerated for wrongful convictions, and remaining silent on state reform efforts to reduce sentences and decriminalize marijuana, all while defending the state’s draconian three-strikes law. In short, Harris made many people’s lives much harder and crueler, even if she did so “for the People.”

There are, increasingly, alternatives to Harris’s approach. In recent years, a small but significant wave of newly elected prosecutors around the country are shifting the position’s traditional role, focusing not just on securing long prison sentences but also on seeking fairness. These so-called “progressive prosecutors” have promised to pursue fewer prosecutions, seek more humane sentences, and review wrongful convictions originating in their offices. They are also expanding their sense of to whom they are accountable—for example, by regularly meeting with racial-justice activists and people who are formerly incarcerated. This is a promising development for those who care about decarceration and justice. But let us not confuse even so-called “progressive prosecution” with the idea of representing all people. Even Larry Krasner, perhaps the most famous of this new wave, has come under fire from activists on the left for his recent decision to appeal a judge’s ruling in favor of writer and organizer Mumia Abu-Jamal. As long as a prosecutor’s job is to seek punishment and inflict harm on a regular basis—the definition of the role—prosecutors cannot represent all of “the people.”

At a CNN town-hall event last week, Harris defended her record as a prosecutor, listing off a series of reforms that she supported and describing her pursuit of criminal cases involving “the most vulnerable” victims. But many people who are prosecuted are vulnerable, too. And, surely, we can all agree that they are people. Harris, and all of the candidates, should aim to expand their visions of who is worthy of representation: As presidential hopefuls, they should aspire to represent us all.