Friday, August 2, 2024

Creating a movement for Kamala Harris

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Aug 02, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Katherine Long

Shannon Watts (left), Jotaka Eaddy (center) and Kamala Harris are pictured over a teal background with text bubbles.

Illustration by Claudine Hellmuth/POLITICO (source images via Getty, AP and iStock)

Happy Friday Rulers! It’s been a week of wins for women at the 2024 Paris Olympics, which we love to see! 

Now let’s get to it.

Win with Black Women, a collective of Black women leaders across all industries, had a scheduled meeting the night of July 21. Then, just a few hours before the meeting, President Joe Biden announced he was dropping out of the race — and endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris.

“We knew we had to shift the conversation,” Jotaka Eaddy, the collective’s founder, tells Women Rule.

That meeting turned into a Zoom call of 44,000 Black women rallying support for Harris and raised $1.6 million. Demand was so high — originally only 1,000 women could log on at a time — it took some callers hours to log on.

The call inspired other identity groups to do the same. Black men organized a call the following day with over 50,000 participants. White, Latina and AAPI women all held calls last week, as well as the “Out for Kamala Harris LGBTQ+ Unity” call. Monday night a call titled “White Dudes for Harris,” with appearances from actors Jeff Bridges, Mark Hamill, Mark Ruffalo and Bradley Whitford saw 190,000 people in attendance.

“I think it speaks volumes to not only the excitement around Vice President Kamala Harris but also the commitment of Americans to mobilize to ensure that she’s elected president,” Eaddy says. “It also speaks to a sense of collective unity that this country so desperately wants as it thinks about the alternative.”

Harris, a woman of Black and South Asian descent, and the first female Vice President, would claim yet another historical first if elected president: She’d be the first woman president — and the first president of Asian descent. With her name on the top of the ticket, organizers seem energized to get the work done needed to secure her seat in the Oval Office.

Angela Ferrell-Zabala is the executive director of Moms Demand Action, a grassroots movement advocating for policy to prevent gun violence. Harris’ ascendence to the top of the ticket means a lot, Ferrell-Zabala tells Women Rule, particularly for Black women.

“The ways that we have been loyal, especially to the Democratic Party, and showing up and frankly saving this country on our back sometimes even when that love is not returned or reciprocated when we get folks elected,” Ferrell-Zabala says. “So this is an example of us being able to see ourselves in someone.”

Black voters remain a reliable voting bloc for Democrats, with 92 percent casting a vote for Biden in 2020. But the country’s largest voting bloc, white women, have historically favored Republican nominees. White women have only favored Democrats twice out of the 17 presidential elections that have taken place since 1952. They favored former President Donald Trump in both the 2020 and 2016 elections. But Democrats are hopeful that Harris will turn the tide.

Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, kickstarted the idea of a call for white women who support Harris. On July 25, “White Women: Answer the Call! Show up for Kamala Harris,” crashed Zoom several times and more than 164,000 women joined.

“It was this idea of: ‘How do we honor and emulate what Black men and women have done to bring our political and economic power to bear on one call?’” Watts tells Women Rule.

For Watts, white women voting for Republicans is something that she is hoping to “flip the script on.”

“A lot of the conversation centered around why white women so often vote for the candidate that will uphold white supremacy and patriarchy. And that’s because we often think it will benefit us,” Watt says.

“And the reality is, it won’t.”

Democrats seem hopeful that this will be the election where white women throw their support behind the Democratic nominee.

“I certainly believe we are going to see some shifts,” Eaddy says, referencing issues of reproductive freedom and health care for women. Harris has vowed to restore Roe v. Wade if elected, a position she has held during her tenure as vice president.

New polling from The Economist/YouGov released on Wednesday found increased support from registered voters who are Black, up 11 points to 74 percent, and women, up 7 points to 50 percent. But in order for Democrats to win over white women, more work needs to be done, the White Women for Harris organizers say.

While speaking on the Zoom call, Watts detailed the work white women need to be doing, such as donating, having conversations with each other and using their privilege for good.

“We are too often perfectly happy to just sit on the sidelines and to expect others to do what I call the unglamorous heavy lifting of grassroots activism,” Watts tells Women Rule. “And that’s not going to be acceptable in this election cycle. We have to use our privilege and our platforms to help Kamala Harris win.”

The enthusiasm that Democrats have been seeing since Harris’ ascension to the top of the ticket has made Democratic voters more hopeful, and Eaddy doesn’t see it fading anytime soon.

“That momentum only grows and it is going to turn into, I believe, massive voter engagement and massive voter turnout,” Eaddy says.

Speaking to an audience of roughly 10,000 at a rally in Atlanta, featuring a performance by Megan Thee Stallion, Harris set the tone for her campaign and was met with a mix of excitement and uncertainty from voters.

In order for the excitement surrounding Harris’ campaign to continue, Eaddy says, there must be a strong commitment to the ground game.

“That’s where we win elections. Talking to voters, mobilizing voters and making sure that voters have all the information they need and the ability to cast that vote,” Eaddy says. “I think that is going to be the driver and what will make the difference for her in this election.”

POLITICO Special Report

Kamala Harris looks on as she's photographed.

Alex Brandon/AP

Kamala Harris Collapsed in 2020. Here’s How to Avoid a Repeat.” by Christopher Cadelago for POLITICO: “Harris’ admirers — not to mention aides and members of her inner circle — detest the mere thought of that painful time. She’s been vice president for four years, they say, standing in for President Joe Biden around the world and becoming the party’s preeminent voice on abortion rights. She’s confident, they contend, and battle-tested. The Kamala Harris of 2024 is light-years better than the Harris of 2019.”

Kari Lake and Ruben Gallego to face off in Arizona Senate race,” by Madison Fernandez for POLITICO: “One of the biggest Senate races of the year is now set: MAGA star Kari Lake will face off against Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego in Arizona as the GOP tries to claw back power in a state that has become a high-stakes battleground.”

Anita Dunn to depart White House,” by Eugene Daniels for POLITICO: “Long-time Joe Biden adviser Anita Dunn is leaving the administration, the first of his tight inner circle to depart the White House since he dropped his reelection bid. She plans to advise Future Forward, the largest super PAC supporting Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign.”

Kamala Harris’ call for ‘reproductive freedom’ means restoring Roe,” by Megan Messerly and Alice Miranda Ollstein for POLITICO: “The Harris campaign told POLITICO the stance the vice president took in a September interview with ‘Face the Nation’ hasn’t changed — support for restoring Roe, which protected abortion until the point of fetal viability, around 22 weeks of pregnancy.”

Number of the Week

7, the percentage of reproductive age women in the U.S. who attempted self-managed abortions, up from 5 percent before the fall of Roe v. Wade in 2022.

Read more here.

MUST READS

Internally displaced Sudanese women wait in a queue to collect aid from a group at a camp in Gadaref.

AFP via Getty Images

Women and girls in Sudan subjected to widespread sexual violence by warring parties, report finds,” by Christian Edwards for CNN: “During 15 months of conflict, women and girls in the capital have been subjected to widespread acts of rape, including gang rape, as well as forced marriages and sexual slavery, according to HRW’s 88-page report, titled ‘Khartoum is Not Safe for Women’ and released on July 29.”

The story behind the woman who inspired Harris to break barriers,” by Deepa Shivaram for NPR: “When Shyamala Gopalan approached her father with an acceptance letter to the University of California, Berkeley and announced her dream of becoming a scientist, she was just 19 years old. It was an unusual move by a woman whose own barrier-breaking choices would allow her daughter, Kamala Harris, to do the same.”

The IOC says the Olympic Games has reached gender parity, but historic gender inequality still lingers,” by Issy Ronald for CNN: “Now, a century later in the French capital, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has distributed its quota places equally in the hope that an equal number of male and female athletes would compete at an Olympic Games for the very first time, though it fell just short of that target as ultimately 5630 male athletes and 5416 female athletes will compete in Paris.”

QUOTE OF THE WEEK

A quote from Kamala Harris reads, It was the same old show. The divisiveness and the disrespect. And let me just say: The American people deserve better. This was in response to Donald Trump's remarks at the National Association of Black Journalists convention.

Read more here.

on the move

Olivia Perez-Cubas is now a director of corporate comms in the D.C. office of the Walt Disney Company. She most recently was managing director of strategic comms for Bullpen Strategy Group and is a Nikki Haley and Marco Rubio alum. (h/t POLITICO Playbook)

Kristi Zuleika Lane Scott has been nominated by Biden to be the National Security Agency’s Inspector General. (h/t National Security Daily)

Angela Kerwin has been named by Biden as the next U.S. ambassador to Brunei. (h/t National Security Daily)

Paige Ennis is now executive vice president for external relations at the Bipartisan Policy Center. She most recently was senior vice president for strategic engagement at the German Marshall Fund, and is an Atlantic Council alum. (h/t POLITICO Influence)

 

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