Since Vice President Kamala Harris became the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee, she and her allies have framed the race as “the prosecutor vs. the felon” — drawing on former President Donald Trump’s 34-count felony conviction in Manhattan for falsifying business records over a payment to adult film star Stormy Daniels to conceal a scheme to interfere in the 2016 election. Several speakers at the Democratic National Convention said similar, with President Joe Biden saying, “Crime will keep coming down when we put a prosecutor in the Oval Office instead of a convicted felon.” But columnis…