The delayed but ultimately decisive win in the 2020 election secured by President-elect Joe Biden and his running mate, Senator Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), has ushered in a series of firsts for the United States: a Black person, a woman, a Black woman, will hold the title of vice president.
Harris, the daughter of Jamaican and Indian immigrants, represented the future-facing message offered by the Democratic ticket for the presidencyâin contrast to the calls from the incumbent Trump to âMake America Great Again,â essentially by returning the worst parts of this countryâs white supremacist history.
Suggested Reading
âThis morning, all across the nation, little girls woke upâespecially little Black and brown girls, who so often feel overlooked and undervalued in their communities,â Biden said when announcing Harris as his pick for VP, in a sentiment that is even more true in the wake of their electoral victory. âBut today, today, just maybe, theyâre seeing themselves for the first time in a new way.â
The Vice President-electâs story, and the wave of new voters she was undoubtedly instrumental in garnering for a Biden presidency in this yearâs election, underscore a rich background and journey. The first South Asian-American, the first graduate of an HBCU (Howard), and the first member of a Black sorority (Alpha Kappa Alpha) to hold the second highest office in the U.S. executive branch, Harrisâ was elevated to this height in large part through the votes of millions of Black women, and the on-the-ground organizing led by thousands in crucial states like Georgia and Pennsylvania.
âBlack women have always been the backbone of this Democratic Party, and oftentimes not valued for our ability to lead,â said Congresswoman Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who was a co-chair of Harrisâ own presidential bid, to NPR of the Biden-Harris victory. âBut I tell you now, Black women are showing that Black women lead, and weâll never go back to the days where candidates only knew our value in terms of helping them get elected. Now they will see how we govern from the White House.â
How Harris will govern from the White House remains to be seen. Her background as a prosecutor in California was a frequent cudgel in efforts to sway Black votersâand Black men in particularâaway from turning out in droves for her and Biden. Despite the 18 percent of Black male voters who went to the polls for Trump, there is undoubtedly the expectation that the Biden-Harris administration has a mandate to forcefully tackle systemic racism impacting the Black community at largeâwhich Biden himself spoke to on Friday while votes were still being talliedâand that 56-year-old Harris will be a youthful if not progressive force in the 77-year-old President-electâs policy making.
A former district attorney in San Francisco who went on to be elected as Californiaâs attorney general, the first Black woman to do so, and then only the second Black woman senator in Congress in 2016, according to the New York Times, Harris is no stranger to the challenges and expectations of breaking barriers. She was a frequent target of gendered attacks from the GOP during the lead-up to the election and was even tasked by the media with answering questions about whether she was a âsocialistââsimilar to the consistent and unfounded accusations against the last Black person with the temerity to seek and win the most rarefied and historically white elected offices in the U.S.
âWhen we talk about breaking barriers, some would suggest that youâre just on this side of the barrier and then you turn out on this side of the barrier,â Harris once remarked to a crowd of young Black women at Spelman College. âKnow instead that breaking a barrier may sometimes be painful but it is so worth it. It is so worth it.â
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.