Friday, July 26, 2024

Usha Vance and the politics of identity

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Jul 26, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Giselle Ruhiyyih Ewing

A black and white photo of Usha Vance is seen atop a teal background.

Illustration by Jade Cuevas/POLITICO (source images via Getty Images and iStock)

Hi Rulers! Congrats on making it to Friday — I don’t know about you all, but this week felt like it lasted three years. May we all find some rest this weekend as we process what we’ve lived through the past week.

Until then, let’s get into it. 

When Usha Vance walked onto the stage at the Republican National Convention last week, she was met by a cheering and supportive audience. That same crowd was punctuated by placards that read: “Mass deportation NOW!”

Social media users were quick to note the dissonance in that moment, as Ms. Vance — the wife of Donald Trump’s vice presidential pick, Ohio Sen. JD Vance — is the daughter of Indian immigrants.

While the signs that night were ostensibly not directed at her, a deluge of racist vituperation quickly poured out against her online in the days that followed.

“We are seeing a dangerous pattern of political leaders, conservative commentators, and far-right extremists blatantly targeting South Asians,” says Stop AAPI Hate, a coalition organizing to counter injustice against Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Several prominent conservatives, including Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist with whom Trump has been known to dine, referenced the “great replacement theory” that white people are being “systematically replaced” by people of color, predominantly through immigration.

“Who is this guy, really? Do we really expect that the guy who has an Indian wife and named their kid Vivek is going to support white identity?” Fuentes asked, questioning Sen. Vance’s allegiance to the anti-immigrant project given his wife’s identity and heritage.

The Trump-Vance campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

While the white supremacists fumed, others celebrated Usha Vance’s presence on the RNC stage, lauding her impressive resume — which includes degrees from both the University of Cambridge and Yale Law School as well as experience clerking for Chief Justice John Roberts and then-D.C. Circuit Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh.

Online audiences expressed excitement to see a brown woman take center stage in a predominantly white space, saying she is her husband’s “secret superpower,” and touting her as an example of the successful immigrant — a picture of the “American dream.”

But some experts caution that this narrative can be dangerous to those who don’t fit into the image of the “right” kind of minority. There are levels to representation, they say, and, without active engagement to uplift other minority groups, Ms. Vance’s mere presence on the RNC stage as a woman of color may not extend meaningfully beyond just that.

“Empty symbolism,” Hajar Yazdiha, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Southern California, says of the “Usha Vance moment,” adding that this kind of “symbolic representation” has historically been weaponized against efforts to realize concrete and meaningful change for marginalized communities.

Anti-caste writer Yashica Dutt tells me the only significant change is that now, “in the sea of white faces that we often see, there is a brown face.”

Indeed, both Yazdiha and Dutt argue that although Usha Vance’s prominent position on the metaphorical and literal GOP stage may appear fundamentally at odds with the ethnonationalism reflected in the “mass deportation” signs and “great replacement” theorists, there may be a bigger political strategy behind highlighting Ms. Vance’s race. Welcoming, and even platforming her and other token minority figures allows identity to be deployed as a political tool.

“The symbolism of Usha Vance as a model minority, as evidence of the American dream, is a classic political strategy,” Yazdiha tells me, referring to the myth that certain minority groups, stereotypically Asian Americans, are preferable to others. She adds that a similar strategy played out in Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy’s respective campaigns.

In fact, Yazdiha says, “juxtaposed against Usha Vance on stage, a ‘mass deportation’ sign can be read as an expression of politically sound border policy rather than racism.”

According to Dutt, the model minority myth can be deeply harmful in its impact on groups it excludes — in particular Black, Latino and Indigenous communities, as well as other Indian Americans who are not of a dominant caste and therefore not included in the model minority group.

“It just feeds into that myth that dominant caste people are superior, whether it is in India or the Indian subcontinent or here in the United States,” Dutt says.

Mobilizing the model minority myth may also serve another strategic aim, Dutt and Yazdiha say. Amid the buzz around representation, highlighting Ms. Vance’s background — as her husband has done repeatedly — could expand the appeal of the Trump-Vance ticket to a broader voter pool.

“It could be one of the big reasons that [Trump’s VP pick] tipped in the favor of JD Vance was the fact that his wife is not only an immigrant, but the right kind of immigrant,” Dutt says.

But, she adds, what Trump didn’t count on was Vice President Kamala Harris’ apparent rise to the top of the Democratic ticket. The near-certainty that Harris — who is also the daughter of a South Asian immigrant — will be the Democratic Party’s nominee for president “changes the equation drastically,” shifting the weight of what South Asian “representation” could look like in Democrats’ favor.

“If for anyone that angle of identity is working, it’s for Kamala Harris,” Dutt tells me, citing the immediate outpouring of support for Harris’ campaign from South Asian women in the days since President Joe Biden ended his campaign and endorsed hers.

But regardless of who the politics of identity may be working for at any given moment, Dutt says that it is incumbent upon voters to “examine politicians that we are putting so much of our faith in, if we can ask them to truly represent the community and not just the model minority.”

In the meantime, women of color occupying these platforms are directly in the line of fire from those who seek to attack them for their identities.

“As bigoted attacks against Usha Vance and Vice President Harris grow — including efforts to pit them against each other — it’s clear that the political leaders and others fueling this hate are completely disregarding the safety and wellbeing of Asian American and immigrant communities,” warns Stop AAPI Hate.

SPECIAL REPORT

A group of Donald Trump's supporters hold signs reading Trump Vance and Back the Blue.

Matt Kelley/AP

As Trump unloads on Harris, even his supporters see her gaining ground,” by Natalie Allison for POLITICO: “Even Donald Trump’s supporters sense he suddenly has a tougher race on his hands. As the former president unloaded on Kamala Harris in the swing state of North Carolina on Wednesday — calling her a “radical, left lunatic” at one point — faithful fans conceded that what had been a sleepy contest had abruptly become something quite different.”

‘We need to defend our sister everywhere': Inside the organizing call for Harris,” by Sally Goldenberg and Jason Beeferman for POLITICO: “After a month of doom, Democrats Zoomed. Within hours of President Joe Biden’s bombshell news Sunday that he would not run for reelection, tens of thousands of Black women across the country — including many in New York — launched an ambitious organizing effort for Vice President Kamala Harris.”

The GOP doesn’t want to talk about abortion. Harris wants to make them,” by Megan Messerly and Alice Miranda Ollstein for POLITICO: “Democrats for the last month have been too busy fighting over whether President Joe Biden should lead the ticket to keep voters’ attention on abortion. Vice President Kamala Harris is trying to bring the focus back.”

Nancy Pelosi endorses ultra-progressive San Francisco official, an Elon Musk foe,” by Dustin Gardiner for POLITICO: “Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has endorsed San Francisco Supervisor Dean Preston, a progressive lightning rod, as he faces a tough reelection challenge in a local race that has drawn the attention of other national figures from Elon Musk to Bernie Sanders.”

Number of the Week

3,284, that's the number of delegates whose support Kamala Harris has garnered to become the Democratic Party's likely presidential nominee. She needed 1,976 to clinch the nomination.

Check out AP’s Democratic delegate tracker here.

MUST READS

Kamala Harris speaks in front of a Zeta Phi Beta Sorority backdrop.

Darron Cummings/AP

Black Sororities and Fraternities Line Up Behind Kamala Harris,” by Maya King for The New York Times: “As Vice President Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign rushes to shore up its base, its efforts will be bolstered by a ready-made coalition: the more than two million members of Black Greek-letter organizations who have quickly united to mobilize Black voters nationwide.”

Something Funny Is Going On With the Campaign Against Florida’s Abortion Initiative,” by Ansev Demirhan for Slate: “In one of the most important non-presidential decisions voters will face this November, Floridians will consider an abortion access ballot initiative. If it passes by a 60 percent vote, the initiative would overturn a recently enacted law that bans abortions after six weeks, before most people even learn that they are pregnant.”

The Momala Economy: The candidate caregivers have been waiting for,” by Chabeli Carrazana and Sara Luterman for The 19th: “When she speaks about the economy, Kamala Harris often talks about the mothers in her life. Her own mother, Shyamala Gopalan, was a single parent who worked as a breast cancer researcher. She’d pack lunches before Harris and her sister, Maya, woke up in the morning, and pay the bills at night after the girls went to bed.”

Meet the queen of the ‘trad wives’ (and her eight children),” by Megan Agnew for The Sunday Times: “Hannah Neeleman was pregnant with her eighth child and she had two due dates. The first was for a baby, obviously. The second, just under two weeks later, was for a beauty pageant.”

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

A quote by Kamal Harris reads: You think you just fell out of a coconut tree? You exist in the context of all in which you live and what came before you.

Read more here.

on the move

Rebecca Kern, formerly a tech policy reporter at POLITICO, is now a public affairs officer at the FTC. (h/t POLITICO Influence)

Celina Stewart will be the next CEO of the League of Women Voters, previously serving as their chief counsel and senior director of advocacy and litigation. (h/t POLITICO Influence)

Bridget Bean is set to begin as the executive director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency in August. (h/t POLITICO’s John Sakellariadis for Pros)

 

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Giselle Ruhiyyih Ewing @giselleruhiyyih

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