Black women back Kamala Harris for President, criticize Black men for lack of support 

Picture of Kamala Harris in front of crowd of people.
Kamala Harris at January 2020 presidential campaign launch rally in Oakland. Photo by Kathy Fang.

Black women voters are strongly supporting Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential bid, and criticizing Black men who don’t share their enthusiasm for a potential Harris administration.

Following his June 27 debate against former President Donald J. Trump, President Joe Biden announced his withdrawal from the race and support for Harris as his successor on July 21. After Biden withdrew his candidacy, Democratic Party strategists began planning to arrive at the next Democratic Party front runner. Black female journalists expressed offense that party members would question whether or not Harris, the current VP, would succeed Biden. 

Prominent Black women accuse Democratic Party of racism, sexism

The weeks leading up to the Democratic National Convention saw several prominent Black female political commentators accusing Democratic National Convention delegates of racism and sexism.

Activist Areva Martin threatened that Black women voters would “walk away” and “blow the party up.” Meanwhile, co-host of ABC’s The View Sunny Hostin interpreted any nominee other than Harris getting the endorsement as the VP being intentionally “overlooked.” Not long afterward, MSNBC’s Symone Sanders asked the rhetorical question, “What does it say to the base of the Democratic Party apparatus that yes, a Black woman can be vice president of the United States of America but she cannot have the top job?”

In this context, nearly 4,000 delegates to the Democratic Party cast virtual votes to formally nominate Harris for president on August 1. 

Shortly after, Black newswomen shifted course toward the public browbeating of Black male voters not loyal to the vice president.

MSNBC’s Joy Reid described brothers not on board with the Harris nomination as  “…white-adjacent men — black and brown men who are like white adjacent, in terms of trying to also be in that dominant position in society.” Similar condemnation of Black males who didn’t support Biden emerged in 2020, when Congresswoman Maxine Waters called out Black male Trump supporters. She said, “…any of them showing their face, I will never ever forgive them for undermining the possibility to help their own people in their own community.” Black men who are skeptical of Harris are not necessarily Trump supporters. 

Black male support of Democrats on decline

The vast majority of Black voters have supported the Democrats since the Civil Rights Act of 1964, according to data compiled by the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies.

However, Black male support of Democratic candidates peaked during the Obama years, and has been on a steep decline since.

In 2016, 93 percent of Black males supported Hillary Clinton in 2016, compared to 96 percent of Black women. According to data from the Survey Center on American life, the sharpest drop in Black men’s Democrat affiliation came when Biden and Harris campaigned as running mates in 2020. Approximately 87 percent of Black males supported Biden-Harris on election day, compared to 95 percent of Black females, per Pew Research Data. An August survey by Pew reports that the number of brothers that would vote for Harris is 73 percent compared with 79 percent of sisters.

“I think we’re already seeing Black men stepping up in a way that they have not before,” Sean Dugar, member, Democratic National Committee

Despite these declines in Black male support for Democrats, some party members remain optimistic. 

“I think we’re already seeing Black men stepping up in a way that they have not before,” said Sean Dugar, a Black man, member of the Alameda County Democratic Central Committee, and an elected member of the Democratic National Committee where he represents California on a national level. Dugar said that even if her Black male constituents don’t see entirely eye-to-eye with her, that as Black men, their “…first duty and first responsibility is always to stand up for Black women.” He expects that sentiment will resonate with Black male voters the country over.

Black male voters have expressed concerns about Harris’ track record as a “top cop.” Dugar remarked that she is aware that there’s more to be done.

“There’s not some magic wand that the White House can wave, state legislature can wave, or any political party can wave to do this all at once,” Dugar said.

To her record as a prosecutor, he added, “I myself don’t always agree with those who prosecute crimes, but she did at least start the process of changing how prosecutions happen and what the impact of prosecutions are on the Black community, especially Black men.”

Dugar said he expects to see brothers “…standing up, supporting the vice president, standing with her at higher levels than we’ve seen in at least the last two election cycles, if not even since the election of Barack Obama.” 

Oakland-born Harris will face Trump on November 5.

About Kwajo Opoku Ware 5 Articles
Kwajo is a second-generation Haitian living in Ghost Town. He was trained in the historical materialist analyses of the Black Panther Party, and delivers his writings through Pan-Afrikan and scientific socialist lenses. Kwajo is the head of a small, Oakland-based media house, The Black Male Journal, where he produces articles, reports, and short form video content centered on Black male wellness and justice advocacy.

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