America
Indian-American Maya Harris leads Hillary Clinton's agenda team
By
Arun KumarWashington, April 16 :
Making her second presidential run, Hillary
Clinton has set up a three person team of senior policy advisers headed by
Indian-American Maya Harris, a former senior fellow at the Center for American
Progress.
The team will help develop an agenda for her presidential campaign that would
be unfolded in a series of policy rollouts expected to begin late next month
after her early phase of road trips to meet voters, Politico reported.
Two others on the policy team are Ann O'Leary, a former legislative director to
Clinton when she was in the Senate; and Jake Sullivan, a top aide to Clinton
while she was Secretary of State and a former national security adviser to Vice
President Joe Biden.
Besides the policy team, Clinton is also likely to keep getting informal advice
from another Indian-American Neera Tanden, the current president of CAP and a
longtime adviser.
Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta headed President Barack Obama's
executive action agenda until earlier this year and was the founder of the CAP.
Harris, 46, has a background in human rights, having served as Vice President
of Democracy, Rights and Justice at the Ford Foundation, where she led a team
that promoted effective governance, democracy and human rights around the
world.
She is the younger sister of Kamala Harris, California's first
Indian-American-African attorney general who is now running for Senate.
Their mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, a cancer researcher who came to the US
from Chennai in 1960, is of Indian descent while their father is from Jamaica.
Harris received her bachelor's degree from the University of California at
Berkeley and graduated with distinction from Stanford Law School.
At age 29, Harris was recruited to serve as dean and chief executive officer of
Lincoln Law School of San Jose making her one of the country's youngest law
school deans.
Harris later served as executive director of the American Civil Liberties
Union, or ACLU, of Northern California, where she led the litigation, public
education, advocacy, and organizing efforts of the nation's largest ACLU
affiliate.
Harris is married to Tony West, who left the Obama administration last
September after five years as associate attorney general, the third top
official in the Justice Department. They have one daughter, Meena.