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Last October, Senator Kamala Harris walked down Georgia Avenue in Northwest Washington D.C., greeting the crowd that had gathered to see her in the homecoming parade at her alma mater,
Howard University. She had returned to her college campus as a contender for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination. The crowd that lined Georgia Avenue watched Harris from the
university sidewalks and from the high school across the street, named after Benjamin Banneker, a black man who became famous for his role in surveying Washington D.C. and for his
clockmaking. Although her campaign ended a few weeks later, Harris’s selection as Joe Biden’s running mate made that autumn parade resonate again, as I imagine it marching past the campus
and through the city to the Naval Observatory, the official residence of the Vice President of the United States.
The area around Observatory Hill carries the markers for the city’s meridians, where the nation centres its place and synchronises its time. Black history in America carries similar markers,
and the California senator’s name is one such — Kamala Harris is another famous black first and historical achiever. That is as it should be.
However, when black Americans celebrate these moments, they are also evidence of a history delayed intentionally. We celebrate Banneker, born a free man, for his work on the city’s design,
but we know that his government also designed laws and social orders that limited and delayed black folks, free and enslaved, from navigating those streets. Senator Kamala Harris provides a
similar bellwether — we can celebrate a black woman’s accomplishments while wondering why the wheels of progress turn so slowly.
Senator Harris is the first black woman on a major party ticket, and in 2016, she was the second black woman elected to the Senate. As a Howard student at the 1994 convocation, I attended a
speech by the first, Illinois Senator Carol Moseley-Braun, elected two years before. As she spoke, I was awed by the history — but the numbers made me weary. After Edward Brooke of
Massachusetts in 1966, she was the second black Senator elected since Reconstruction. Judging by the reaction of one of her colleagues, little had changed over the years.
On his podcast, “The Right Time”, the journalist Bomani Jones recently told a story of Moseley-Braun on an elevator with North Carolina Senator Jesse Helms. During the ride, he whistled
“Dixie”, the song of the Confederate South. Given his public speeches and his record on race, it isn’t surprising. “Turning back the clock” is a familiar warning about the erosion of even
modest racial progress. In her book, The Warmth of Other Suns, Isabel Wilkerson noted the fear of the idea turned to practice, when white employers turned back their clocks to get more hours
of labor out of their black domestic servants. Maybe Banneker’s triumph in clockmaking carried some hope of a remedy for that kind of unevenness in America.
On the 100th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment, it’s important to remember that many Black women couldn’t cast a ballot until the Voting Rights Act of 1965. To say that all American
women can celebrate a century of the franchise is to erase the labor of voting rights activists like Fannie Lou Hamer, Amelia Boynton, Ella Baker, Diane Nash, and Joyce Ladner. A
Biden-Harris victory would surely be unlikely without their work to narrow the gap between the promise of an equal vote and the reality.
Threats to that progress are real and growing, because of new versions of old tactics. Past generations of black voters faced bodily harm. As President Trump cuts resources for mail-in
voting, many Americans will weigh the coronavirus health risks of voting in person, and some will feel forced to stay at home. As the first black vice-presidential candidate, Harris’s moment
coincides with multiple efforts to turn back the clock. But with the threats so apparent and the stakes so high, the sense of purpose in 2020 may motivate voters who sat out in 2016.
The early excitement may be a result of Senator Harris’s command of the moment. Her first address showed a clear and thoughtful evaluation of the Trump administration’s record on the
pandemic response and police violence. Given the success of the announcement, the Harris selection is celebrated, not just for this moment but for the bigger promise of a win in November.
With that, the meridians of Observation Hill would be able to measure a substantial step in American racial progress.
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