The world according to Kamala Harris

By Robert Draper

In Kamala Harris’ acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention this past summer in Chicago, she sought to cast herself in thoroughly relatable terms. “The middle class is where I come from,” she said, using “middle class” eight more times as if trying to weave herself into the centre of an American electorate that has yet to understand her.

The candidate’s self-description was factually accurate, but what it left out is far more revealing. From interviews with roughly 100 people currently or formerly associated with Harris, understanding the Democratic nominee for president requires taking her phrase “where I come from” and breaking it into three parts.

First, she is the tenacious eldest child of supremely motivated, risk-taking immigrants: a mother who came from India with the ambition of curing breast cancer, and a Jamaican father who set his sights on shaping his country’s modern economy.

Second, she is the offspring of scientists whose devotion to reason and methodology would guide her in her first career as a law-and-order, linear-minded prosecutor rather than an ideologue. “Fix it,” she would say. Or “Let’s move on”.

Third, she is the daughter of an Asian woman and a Black man — a human Venn diagram “living in the intersections as a woman of colour,” said her friend Mini Timmaraju, president and CEO of Reproductive Freedom for All. From Harris’ childhood in the Berkeley flatlands of California to her current position in the White House, she has lived with the awareness that her gender and racial background have made the world prone to prejudging her.

“It’s not a new thing for her, being disrespected for reasons that have nothing to do with her actual capabilities,” said Jill Louis, an attorney and friend of Harris’ since the two were sorority sisters at Howard University. “Does she talk about it? No. Because she’s not a whiner.”

Still, said Louis of her friend, “You learn to put those shields up early.”

That armour has confounded even those who have known her for decades. One of them, former San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown, once Harris’ political mentor and boyfriend, reflected on her in a recent interview. “She’s still a mystery,” he said. “Still a mystery. And she’s going to keep it that way.”

A Succession of Risks

From certain angles, Harris lives the life of a perfectly normal American woman.

She works out in the morning as penance for her sweet tooth. She dances to hip-hop and R&B, as she once did to Aretha Franklin’s ‘Rock Steady’ in the living room of her childhood home in Berkeley. She has a piercing, attenuated laugh that amuses her friends, even though one of them likes to ask her in mock exasperation, “Are you done yet?”

She is married to a man she calls Dougie who is fond of the band ‘Rage Against the Machine’. She goes to a Baptist church and has been known not to take calls when the San Francisco 49ers are playing. She is superstitious: When she ran for district attorney and attorney general in California, she always ate on Election Day at Delancey Street Restaurant, a San Francisco institution.

She can be emotionally inaccessible to some, particularly members of the media while warming immediately to those who are vulnerable or grief-stricken. She is a spur-of-the-moment visitor at hospitals where friends or their loved ones are dying. She gravitates toward the children of others, taking them aside to inquire about their schoolwork and favourite teachers.

So yes, she is normal. But ordinary, no.

What Harris characterized in her acceptance speech as her “unexpected” journey to the precipice of the Oval Office becomes somewhat less so when considering her origins.

Her father, Donald, a product of Jamaica’s entrepreneurial class, emigrated to the United States in 1961 at the age of 22 to study economics at the University of California at Berkeley. Sixty years later, after becoming Stanford University’s first Black professor of economics to achieve tenure, his role in the development of Jamaica’s post-colonial economy would earn him that country’s Order of Merit, a distinction that only 15 living individuals can possess.

After her parents separated when she was 5, Harris fixated on a single role model, her mother. Shyamala Gopalan Harris hailed from upper-crust Tamil Brahmin stock in what is now known as Chennai, India, and took her own journey to California at the age of 19 to become a biomedical scientist.

She would go on to receive grants from the National Institutes of Health for her pioneering work in the field of breast cancer research before dying of cancer herself in 2009.

In November 2021, while attending the Paris Peace Forum as vice president, Harris visited the Institut Pasteur, where she met with a scientist who had collaborated with her mother on oestrogen research four decades earlier.

Harris is, in sum, a child of high achievers, raised in a household frequented by intellectuals and civil rights activists. Huey P. Newton, founder of the Black Panther Party, was a familiar presence in her neighbourhood. At the Black Cultural Centre where her mother took Harris and her younger sister most Thursday evenings, legendary figures such as James Baldwin, Nina Simone and Shirley Chisholm took the stage.

By the time she was 12, Harris had already visited Jamaica, India and Zambia and was attending school in Montreal, after her mother took a job at McGill University there. As difficult as such a transition would have been for any child, much less a girl of colour thrust into an overwhelmingly white student body, she came out of it with passable French and a determination to “return home for college”, as she later wrote.

“Home” turned out to be the prestigious historically Black university, Howard, the Washington, DC-based alma mater of one of her childhood heroes, Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.

At Howard, where she carried a briefcase to class and was on the school debate team, she struck her classmates as a preternaturally worldly young woman determined to forge her own path. “She always had her own style and was never a follower,” said Stacey Johnson Batiste, a friend since kindergarten. “She’s been wearing pearls as long as I can remember.”

At what is today known as UC Law San Francisco, she was not a gifted student in the way her parents were and was not viewed as “most likely to succeed,” a distinction that fell to her classmate, J. Christopher Stevens, a future US ambassador who was killed by militants in Benghazi, Libya. However, she became president of the school’s Black Law Students Association and organized a job fair on campus for herself and her fellow seniors.

Straight out of law school in 1989, Harris became one of a handful of applicants to join the district attorney’s office of Alameda County, an esteemed Oakland group of prosecutors with a storied history: Earl Warren, who as chief justice of the Supreme Court would later write the majority opinion in Brown v. Board of Education establishing racial segregation in public schools as unconstitutional, became the county’s district attorney in 1925.

As a line prosecutor, Harris handled some of the office’s toughest cases, many of them involving sexual assault or child abuse. “She had very strong skills in the courtroom,” said a former supervisor of Harris’, Nancy O’Malley, who later became the county’s district attorney. “But what drew me to recruit her for sex crimes cases was how she could sit in the hallway next to a victim and show them such compassion that she’d win their trust and have the courage to take the witness stand.”

O’Malley could also see that her young prosecutor “was obviously very ambitious’’ as she began to move into San Francisco society and politics. In March 1994, San Francisco Chronicle columnist Herb Caen noted in print that the California state assembly speaker, Willie Brown, had celebrated his 60th birthday in the company of Clint Eastwood, Barbra Streisand and “the speaker’s new steady, Kamala Harris, an Alameda County deputy DA who is something new in Willie’s love life”.

Brown went on to appoint Harris to the Unemployment Insurance Appeals Board (with an annual salary of $97,088) and then, six months after she resigned, to the California Medical Assistance Commission (which paid $72,000 annually). A year later, Harris accompanied Brown — who was 31 years older than her and married, but long estranged from his wife — to the wedding of Nancy Corinne Pelosi, the eldest daughter of the San Francisco congresswoman and future House speaker.

“No question, Willie opened doors for Kamala,” said Art Torres, chair of the state’s Democratic Party from 1996 to 2009. “But as soon as she walked through them, you couldn’t help but notice her and say, ‘Who is this future star?’”

Although the two broke up just after Brown won election as mayor of San Francisco in December 1995, Harris had by then cemented friendships with many of the city’s high-profile Democratic donors, including Vanessa Getty and Susan Swig. She was also given a seat on the board of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. “We wanted to grab her before one of the city’s other cultural institutions did,” said Chuck Collins, an attorney and long-time museum board member.

In 1998, Harris said goodbye to the East Bay, relocated to San Francisco and joined its district attorney’s office. The DA, Terence Hallinan, belonged to one of the city’s dominant political families, along with the Pelosis and the Feinsteins. But Harris was among Hallinan’s deputies who found his management style to be chaotic. She resigned in 2000 and moved to the city attorney’s office. Three years later, she ran against him and won.

Her long-shot victory against Hallinan amounted to the first in what would be a series of career risks. The second one came four years later when Harris became the first prominent elected Democrat in California to endorse the presidential candidacy of Barack Obama, whom she had met at a fundraiser in San Francisco during his 2004 run for the Senate.

The two ascendant Black Democrats developed a natural kinship, although Harris fretted over her political bet to break from a party apparatus that had sworn its allegiance to Hillary Clinton. In the end, said Brian Brokaw, who later became her political consultant, “it was a defining moment in her career.’’

Obama’s victory in 2008 all but guaranteed Harris a job in the administration’s Justice Department. Instead, she elected to run for state attorney general, a post that had never been occupied by either a woman or a person of colour.

Her 2010 upset victory by less than a point over Steve Cooley, the Republican district attorney of Los Angeles County, featured elements that foreshadowed her current candidacy: She took on Cooley’s claim that she was a “radical” by vowing to represent “all the people of California,” and turned in a convincing debate performance aided by her opponent’s unforced errors. Her electoral outcome also took four weeks to confirm.

Nonetheless, the race established Harris as a national star. “I was so in awe of the gamble she took, running as a woman of colour to be the state’s lead prosecutor,” said Barbara Boxer, at the time a US senator from California. “In those days, political machines wouldn’t take a risk on a woman. She had to build her own machine.”

As San Francisco district attorney, Harris unleashed a flurry of new initiatives, some more successful than others. In similar fashion, the new state attorney general made the most of her elevated profile, taking on some risky initiatives.

She led partnerships with other states and Mexico to attack transnational gangs. Twice, she went toe to toe with the administration of Obama: First, in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis, she pushed for a more advantageous settlement with the banks than Justice Department officials had brokered. Later, in the case of Corinthian Colleges, she demanded that the for-profit institution pay back the students it had swindled when the Education Department preferred to see Corinthian’s debts forgiven. In both cases, Harris prevailed.

Four years into Harris’ tenure, Boxer announced that she would not seek another term in the Senate. Harris declared her candidacy a few days later and proceeded to swamp the field. After Harris’ victory in November 2016, Boxer congratulated her successor, saying, “This is the dream job of a lifetime”.

It therefore surprised Boxer when, only two years into the job, Harris declared that she was running for president. In daring to fail — which Harris ultimately did, suspending her presidential campaign in December 2019, six weeks before the first primary votes were cast — the candidate displayed something that Boxer would later describe as awe-inspiring.

“It was her unflappability,” she said. “She always saw herself this way, as presidential material.”

A Prosecutor’s View

Harris’ 2019 campaign revealed a person for whom, despite her previous four electoral victories, politics did not come naturally. She struggled to define herself ideologically. She could not convince Democratic donors that she was more electable than the two top candidates in the field, Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders.

And, said Brown, her political mentor, “What she hasn’t ultimately mastered is how to become the most interesting candidate to the media.”

Those who have known Harris from her earlier days in California say that unlike the state’s governor, Gavin Newsom, she is not a political junkie. Those who have worked with her as vice president also point out the distinctions between herself and her boss, Biden.

She is culturally to the left of him, having grown up among the San Francisco Bay Area’s LGBTQ+ community, and her reflexive support for women’s reproductive freedom is uncomplicated by the traditional Catholic beliefs that Biden holds. At the same time, she lacks his reverence for New Deal-style big government.

Biden, his aides say, sees the world in two opposing political camps: democracies and autocracies. The vice president sees the world as bifurcated, with those who obey the rules on one side and those who break them on the other.

The most common descriptor of Harris by those who have worked with her is “prosecutor”,

Harris often speaks to audiences as she once did to juries, making her case through the stark marshalling of facts. She prizes linearity and scorns what she terms “fancy speeches.” Her speechwriters are instructed to strip away purple prose in favour of declarative sentences.

Fittingly for a career prosecutor, the modifier most used by subordinates to describe Harris is “prepared.” Early in her political career, when meeting an influential person, she would direct staffers to collect that person’s business card, retain it in a book and later find a pretext for following up with him or her.

Before making up her mind on a policy, she will often deputize an aide to argue the opposite side of the issue. The policy binders assembled for her by past and current aides are throwbacks to the ones she carried into a courtroom: assiduously organized, written in direct language and detailed to a fault. Several staffers interviewed for this article spoke, half-joking, of their dread of Harris’ later handing back the briefing books ravaged by her copious marginalia.

On Capitol Hill, Sen. Harris’ preparedness was evident in her grilling of witnesses. A Democratic colleague of hers on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Sen. Martin Heinrich of New Mexico, recalled, “As a brand-new senator, she sat at the very end of the dais. Usually, by the time it’s the new senator’s turn, all the good questions would have already been asked. But she was always light on her feet, thought fast and managed to get important information.”

During the nationally televised Supreme Court confirmation hearings in 2018 of Brett Kavanaugh before the Judiciary Committee, Harris was the 20th of 21 members to question him. Still, she managed to stump the nominee with one of the hearing’s most memorable lines of inquiry: “Can you think of any laws that give the government the power to make decisions about the male body?”

“In some ways, she was ahead of her time with that question,” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a more senior Democratic colleague on the Judiciary Committee. “She was calling attention to where these guys were on these issues.”

An Unfamiliar Role 

After 17 years as a district attorney, state attorney general and US senator, Harris became vice president and was no longer her own boss.

She was not free to set an agenda, start pilot programs or even hire a staff of her own choosing.

Biden had, in fact, given her the same level of influence that he had as vice president in the Obama administration: She would be able to participate across the entire spectrum of White House policymaking, and she would be the last person to talk to the president before a major policy decision was reached. There was a major difference, however.

Unlike Biden’s vice presidency, in which he often briefed reporters off the record and in the process described his own impact on major issues, the influence of Harris was opaque at best. Given that she was serving a president who had spent nearly half his life on Capitol Hill, it was never clear what value she could add as a one-term senator.

The two assignments that she was publicly given by Biden — ensuring passage of voting rights legislation, and addressing the root cause of migration from Latin American countries — stood little chance of being seen as successful and, in fact, were not. For the first time in her public life, Harris was viewed by many as unserious. Biden’s favourability ratings languished, but hers were even worse. “She was second fiddle, by the nature of the office,” said former Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., who had worked alongside Harris on the Judiciary Committee. “It’s extremely difficult to gain respect in that job, and she was doing the best she could with it.”

She gave few interviews and often struggled when she did.

When Lester Holt of NBC News asked her in June 2021 why she had not been to the border when she was working on immigration, she retorted, “And I haven’t been to Europe.” More than a dozen of her friends and political associates said they cringed at her defensiveness.

Many of her top aides were new not only to the White House but to the political warfare of Washington and lacked the leverage to go to bat for her in the West Wing. In Harris’ first 18 months in office, before she turned to more seasoned advisers, she had a high staff turnover and struggled to hold her own against the president’s tight inner circle of older men who had served him for decades.

But she seized whatever opportunities she could to make her mark on Biden administration policies, people close to her said.

An initiative she had championed as state attorney general to lower diesel fumes, and which she brought to the Senate in the form of the 2019 Clean School Bus Act, ultimately became a $5 billion set aside for electric school buses in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act of 2021. A bill she introduced in 2019 as a senator to replace lead pipes nationwide finally achieved funding through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 and the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022.

Biden’s team cast the president as the architect of those laws, as was to be expected. The same held true with the 2022 gun-safety law known as the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which was seen as a culmination of Biden’s decades-long effort to stem gun violence. Behind the scenes, however, Harris and her staff worked with the White House’s Office of Gun Violence Prevention to implement the law through a series of executive actions, including improving active-shooter drills at schools and requiring that all businesses principally engaged in the business of selling firearms undergo background checks.

Harris was not a big player in shaping the landmark economic legislation of Biden’s presidency, and it was his experienced foreign policy team that took the lead in the international response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But she did focus on helping small businesses and families, particularly as an early champion of the childcare tax credit and in funnelling COVID-19 relief money to small businesses. In February 2022, she was dispatched to the Munich Security Conference, where she briefed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Russia’s hostile intentions. (Zelenskyy reacted sceptically to Harris’ warnings. Five days later, Russian troops invaded his country.)

The event that finally gave Harris a national platform was the June 2022 Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade and eliminated the constitutional right to abortion. Still, she was initially leery when Biden’s chief of staff at the time, Ron Klain, urged her to become the administration’s leading voice on women’s reproductive rights. She did not want to be seen as a figurehead, she told Klain, especially if Biden, long uncomfortable discussing abortion in public, showed any equivocation in backing her efforts. Klain assured her that she would have the president’s full support.

Harris proceeded to convene dozens of meetings with activists, mayors and medical professionals across the country, often in states with highly restrictive abortion laws. At an event in Nevada, a local staffer at Planned Parenthood, Raquel Cruz-Juarez, made the observation that a person did not have to abandon their faith to recognize that the government should not be telling women what to do with their bodies.

Turning to an aide, Harris said, “You need to write that down.”

Harris took Cruz-Juarez’s sentiment back to the White House, where Biden had been inclined to tout his economic accomplishments as the predominant message for the upcoming 2022 midterm elections. By November, the party had largely taken Harris’ view that abortion rights were the winning issue. The Democrats held onto the Senate and lost far fewer House seats than anticipated in the best midterm performance by a Democratic administration in modern history.

Four months ago, after Biden’s abysmal debate performance against former President Donald Trump, most party leaders turned against him. His vice president did not. “She was 100% loyal to the president in saying it was his choice, and she stood completely behind him,” Klain said. “But once he made the decision, she moved forward in a way that showed her political prowess and the affection she had for the party. She became the consensus nominee because she deserved it.”

‘A Unicorn’

Rarely has Harris discussed the barriers she and other women have faced, especially those of colour. She has instead emphasized how her mother, “a brown woman with an accent”, maintained her composure and “taught us to never complain about injustice, but do something about it”.

One of those injustices she mentioned was how her mother faced sexual discrimination at the University of California at Berkeley, where she worked as a scientist at the cancer research laboratory in the 1970s. Two childhood friends of Harris’ recalled that her mother relocated to McGill after her job at Berkeley was terminated because of a clash with a male colleague. (The Washington Post first reported on this incident.)

Several years later, Harris, by then a teenager, returned to the Bay Area during summer vacation and joined a few Black friends who were driving to a party on Alameda Island. According to two friends to whom Harris later described the incident, their car was pulled over by local police officers. Although the officers did not issue any citations, Harris and her friends were instructed to turn around and depart the island immediately.

In college, her friend and sorority sister Louis later recalled, “She’d talk about what I’d call disparaging slurs for every aspect of her heritage.”

Upon entering politics in 2003, she faced two opponents in the race for district attorney, both white men, who would broadly hint that she owed her candidacy to Brown, despite the facts that the two had ended their relationship eight years earlier and that the mayor was neither an adviser nor a donor to her campaign.

Later still, Harris, the only woman of colour on the Senate Intelligence Committee, was cut off by her Republican colleagues while attempting to question witnesses during committee hearings, an unusual breach of protocol, twice in one week.

“As a Black woman of multiple backgrounds, she’s in some ways a unicorn in American politics,” said Collins, the attorney who served with Harris on the board of San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art. “And for all of us with diverse backgrounds, particularly from her generation or earlier, we’ve always had an unmitigated focus on excellence, knowing that in order to achieve it, we have to over-perform.”

One of Harris’ earliest efforts in the Senate was to address disparities in maternal health among Black women, who suffer the highest rate of pregnancy-related deaths in the United States.

“The problem is no secret in our community, but it had never gotten serious attention in the federal government,” said Rep. Lauren Underwood, a Black Democrat from Illinois who teamed with Harris and another Black Democrat, Rep. Alma Adams of North Carolina, to write the so-called Black Maternal Health Momnibus Act. “As the only Black woman in the Senate, her voice was uniquely suited to tackle that issue.”

Noting that Harris carried a piece of the legislation with her into the White House, where it was signed into law in November 2021, Underwood said, “That doesn’t happen without her leadership.”

Harris has often used the vice president’s official residence at the Naval Observatory to stage events that signal her dedication to inclusiveness. In June 2023, she threw a Pride event that included among the roughly 300 attendees Donna Sachet, a San Francisco activist and drag performer whom Harris knew from her days in the city.

In an interview, Sachet recalled being surprised and thrilled to have received her invitation but also somewhat nervous. She emailed the vice president’s social secretary and asked if she would be able to attend “in my persona.”

Yes, came the reply, along with the request that Sachet arrive a half-hour early so that she could be included in the VIP seating. She did so. The vice president spotted her, walked over and gave her a hug.

Looking around the residence in amazement, Sachet said, “I don’t even know how I got invited to this.”

“Because I put you on the list,” Harris replied.

The End of an Unexpected Journey

On the morning of July 21, Harris was fixing pancakes for her niece’s two daughters in the vice president’s residence when she received a call from Biden, who informed her that he would not be seeking a second term and was instead endorsing her to succeed him. The conversation was brief, and Harris knew what to do after it was over.

What ensued over the next 10 hours, with Harris sitting in her workout clothes in the living room of the vice president’s official residence while surrounded by eight aides with buzzing cellphones, was a demonstration of her methodical nature as she proceeded in short order to consolidate support within the party.

Her swift success was, in large part, a testament to Biden’s imprimatur. But it also was a validation of the unsung work she had done as his vice president. “I’d been on so many Zoom calls with her on so many issues,” said Klobuchar, who had already announced her support of the vice president by the time she received a call from her that afternoon. “She was doing important stuff behind the scenes.”

That groundswell of support, combined with her energetic public appearances after Biden’s endorsement, catapulted Harris to overnight sensation status as she waltzed unopposed into the Democratic National Convention. The journey that she described in her acceptance speech as “unexpected” would, over time, take on an aura of inevitability.

Nonetheless, it is a trajectory freighted with portent, of the sort that sometimes seems like the fruit of a Hollywood scriptwriter’s overly caffeinated imagination. A daughter of immigrants, reverential of law and order, determinedly stoic, finds herself pitted against a bombastic white male who has been accused and convicted of numerous criminal offences and whose political vocabulary is a soundtrack of grievance and bigoted insults.

The two have in common a desire for the presidency and nothing else.

If Trump loses, he is likely to claim otherwise, as he has ever since he was defeated four years ago. Harris, for her part, publicly acknowledged that she had no path to victory during her previous quest for the presidency, when she suspended her campaign on Dec. 3, 2019, before the Iowa caucuses.

Five days earlier, she and her husband hosted a Thanksgiving dinner at their rental house in Des Moines, where Harris had been spending much of the previous weeks campaigning. In addition to the Harris family, two other invited guests showed up: Klobuchar, who was then Harris’ rival for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, and her husband, John Bessler.

“She already knew what was upon her,” Klobuchar recalled.

But, she added, the subject of defeat did not come up. Instead, Harris made the dinner, served it, sat with her niece’s two small daughters in her lap, left the campaign at the end of the weekend and returned to her job in the Senate.

-New York Times

 

 

Vice President Kamala Harris meets with reporters before a rally in Detroit on Oct. 19, 2024. Harris has emphasized her middle-class roots. She dwells less on her experiences as a woman of colour -Ruth Fremson/The New York Times

 

Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.

otc high blood pressure treatment blood pressure guidelines medications blood pressure pills that is safe for the liver high blood pressure medication levothyroxine blood pressure medication that reduces blood pressure is there any difference in blood pressure pills high blood pressure child medication blood pressure medication recommendation nose blue blood pressure medication blood pressure is 150 68 should i take my medication blood pressure medication while nursing taking a bunch of high blood pressure pills aerobic exercise and blood pressure medication good blood pressure medication acupuncture treatment for low blood pressure best over the counter pills for high blood pressure blood pressure pill amlodipine besylate high blood pressure signs and treatment moderna vaccine blood pressure medication which blood pressure drugs do not cause tinnitus blood pressure medication fights cancer blood pressure medication skin rash side effects of high blood pressure medication impotence medication to avoid on blood pressure medications high blood pressure rx medication peripheral neuropathy caused by blood pressure medication high blood pressure in pregnancy treatment nice runny nose do to blood pressure medication how to get off of blood pressure pills hiv medication and high blood pressure niacin treatment for high blood pressure two drugs for blood pressure that caused cancer high blood pressure causing medications high blood pressure medication names canada blood pressure medication side effects alcohol i take 3 blood pressure medication blood pressure pills that help with anxiety what iv drug raises blood pressure list of doctors who formulated blood pressure medications how to remember blood pressure medications sleeping pills blood pressure how fast does blood pressure medication take effect sweet n low high blood pressure medication home treatment for blood pressure high blood pressure medication matrocet high blood pressure medication doses blood pressure drug bystolic iberstaron blood pressure medication blood pressure medications st alphabetical celexa and high blood pressure medication does blood pressure pills irritation skin can i take combivent with high blood pressure medication blood pressure medications beta blockers list what to do if blood pressure medication does not work drugs to lower your blood pressure red beet pills for blood pressure taurine and blood pressure medications how ling for garlic pills to lower blood pressure blood pressure medication list and side effects can i take aspirin with high blood pressure medication blood pressure medication teaching about hot tubs water pills high blood pressure over counter what is an arb medication for blood pressure resveratrol high blood pressure medication high blood pressure medication and weight loss gum disease and blood pressure medication benzenesulfonic acid in blood pressure medication taking two blood pressure pills by mistake allergy pills for high blood pressure blood pressure prescription drugs safety blood pressure medication in pregnancy trazodone and blood pressure medication which blood pressure medication is linked to skin cancer list of blood pressure medications with the least side effects could blood pressure medication make blood thicker disadvantages of high blood pressure medication blood pressure medications ludipril typical drugs for high blood pressure otc water pills for high blood pressure blood pressure medications that do not doncause bowel blockage high blood pressure after corrosion treatment how soon does high blood pressure medication work blood pressure medication teaching amertyrine high blood pressure medication increased blood pressure and heart rate after drug overdose over the counter drugs high blood pressure blood pressure medication 25 is blood pressure medication a nitrate most effective blood pressure pills blood pressure medical does red yeast rice interfere with high blood pressure medication can apple cider vinegar pills lower blood pressure does blood pressure medication give you headaches high blood pressure medication and driving should you take blood pressure pills with food inn blood pressure drugs can you eat bananas if taking blood pressure medication popular high blood pressure medication blood pressure medication los blood pressure medication second drug low blood pressure and hypertension medication do water pills lower blood pressure high blood pressure pill aqunadine high blood pressure cholesterol medication how does medication lower blood pressure acetaminophen blood pressure medication blood pressure medication 30 mg that works around the heart what does grapefruit do to blood pressure medication can red yeast rice be taken with blood pressure medication pharmaceutical treatment for high blood pressure are blood pressure pills statins blood pressure pills that start with r blood pressure medication and male impotence taking baby aspirin with other high blood pressure medications what is the medical name for a blood pressure cuff leg cramps and blood pressure medication blood pressure pill name starts with p natural high blood pressure treatments blood pressure medication names losartan higher blood pressure with radiation treatment medical marijauna high blood pressure how to avoid medication for high blood pressure what time is best to take blood pressure medication medication for palpitations and high blood pressure latest news on blood pressure treatment what if i take two blood pressure pills does xanax interfere with blood pressure medication amlipan blood pressure medication vitamin e and blood pressure medication tell me the side effects of high blood pressure medication herbs pills to lower blood pressure blood pressure medication urge to urinate what medication will safely replace lisop as blood pressure medicine active ingredient in high blood pressure medication blood pressure medications cause adrenal tumors is biktarvy ok to take with high blood pressure medication alembic blood pressure medication sandoz blood pressure medication exercise high blood pressure medication grapefruit pills blood pressure treatment for high blood pressure at home blood pressure medication for patients with osa cycle on off blood pressure medication blood pressure drugs that do not cause heat sensitivity blood pressure medications that do not cause coughing what blood pressure medications do not cause rosacea pfizer blood pressure medication side effects do garlic pills really help lower blood pressure should i take medication for anxiety induced blood pressure treatment for uncontrolled blood pressure decongestant medication high blood pressure can stiff days be used with high blood pressure medication how long does it take medication to lower blood pressure what if i miss a blood pressure pill tribenzor high blood pressure pills law lawsuit 2023 treatment of sudden drop in blood pressure zoloft and blood pressure medication orange high blood pressure pill cancer blood pressure pill why cant people with high blood pressure take keto pills how long for blood pressure to go down mini pill should i get second opinion before taking blood pressure medication blood pressure erectile dysfunction medication high blood pressure medication m lot ben medical device lowers blood pressure puppy ate blood pressure pill are there medications for low blood pressure dod blood pressure medication is losartan a blood pressure pill combination drugs for blood pressure marijuana and blood pressure medication interaction blood pressure medication interactions with grapefruit can you eat bananas while taking high blood pressure medication steps before going on high blood pressure medication blood pressure medication when to cut down foods to avoid on blood pressure medication blood pressure medications depression blood pressure medication non beta blocker tattoos and high blood pressure medication what is the medications used to lower blood pressure quickly high blood pressure medication leg swelling blood pressure medication men in your 40s blood pressure medication wieight loss blood pressure medication hy can blood pressure medication lower blood sugar does blood pressure medication make you pee natural treatment high blood pressure during pregnancy can you take l arginine with high blood pressure medication what class of blood pressure medication can can blood pressure pills reduce appetite faa approved medication for high blood pressure high blood pressure medication during pregnancy best blood pressure medication for type 2 diabetes blood pressure and pain medication pain medication that does not affect blood pressure best high blood pressure drugs on the market if you take incorrect medications to lower blood pressure low blood pressure treatments does your body have to adjust to blood pressure medication why water pill for high blood pressure drugs for treatment of very high blood pressure during pregnancy can i drink grapefruit juice with high blood pressure medication can blood pressure pills make you feel cold high blood pressure medication that helps with weight loss amlodipine blood pressure drug blood pressure medication for infants varicose veins blood pressure medication life extension high blood pressure medication does tylenol interfere with blood pressure medication can i take diamox with other high blood pressure medications prestige medical blood pressure cuff calibration drugs used for high blood pressure chamomile tea and high blood pressure medication narcotics stored alongside blood pressure medications in does nutrigrove blood pressure pills work extremely low blood pressure treatment blood pressure medication for iga nephropathy blood pressure medication low side effects can i increase my blood pressure medication what is the best blood pressure medication to take drugs that cause increased blood pressure does biotin interfere with high blood pressure medication cani od on high blood pressure pills blood pressure medication that also helps with jerking blood pressure medication categories first line treatment of high blood pressure medication for low blood pressure in usa armour thyroid drug interactions blood pressure meds hepatitis c treatment high blood pressure high blood pressure arb drugs low blood pressure treatment with essential oils high blood pressure medication list for pregnancy blood pressure medication and snake venom blood pressure medication low dose liquid blood pressure medications ivf drugs and high blood pressure left my blood pressure medication does it matter when you take blood pressure medication can you take blood pressure pills twice a day privilin blood pressure medication how big are blood pressure pills once you start blood pressure medication can you stop diuretic in blood pressure medication what medication reduce blood pressure new blood pressure treatment prescribed home medications for high blood pressure blood pressure medication side effects forums taking blood pressure pills dizzy when bend over a lot blood pressure medication and nyquil cinnamon pills and high blood pressure temporary high blood pressure treatment single agent blood pressure medication blood pressure medication made in china fda approved medications to reduce blood pressure immediate treatment for high blood pressure at home best time to take blood pressure pills muscle loss on high blood pressure medication blood pressure medication when needed treat high blood pressure without medication blood pressure medication side effects for men cbd pills for high blood pressure blood pressure regulation without medication blood pressure medication and pre workout high blood pressure alzheimer disease and antihypertensive treatment miss blood pressure medication blood pressure pills suicide peaceful emergency drugs for low blood pressure common blood pressure medications in canada systolic blood pressure define medical viril and high blood pressure pills can statin drugs help lower blood pressure do you have to wean off blood pressure medication new drugs for blood pressure when is high blood pressure medication necessary drugs for hi blood pressure cold medications and blood pressure taking 2 blood pressure pills mistake why doctors stopped prescribing blood pressure medication common high blood pressure medication canada what side effects does blood pressure medication have ulcer medication high blood pressure can high blood pressure medication elevate alkaline phosphatase blood pressure medication warning getting blood pressure medication jamaica alkaline water and blood pressure medication blood pressure going up and down with medication drugs reduce systolic blood pressure treatment for rapid high blood pressure low blood pressure alternative treatment do all high blood pressure medications cause weight gain medication for increasing blood pressure blood pressure medication for african american males vitamins for high blood pressure treatment aleve with blood pressure medication how to lower blood pressure without pills blood pressure triple pill who blood pressure guidelines for hygiene treatment what drug reduces blood pressure blood pressure medications enalapril met blood pressure medication