With Vice President Kamala Harris at the top of the ticket and Senate seats open, Democrats could for the first time send two Black women to the chamber.
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Representative Lisa Blunt Rochester, a Senate candidate in Delaware, speaking at the Democratic National Convention last month. “To know that you’re going to be in a place and belong” was invaluable, she said on Friday.
There was Carol Moseley Braun, the Illinois Democrat who in 1992 became the first Black woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Nearly a quarter-century would pass before Kamala Harris became the second, in 2016. Seven more years would go by before the third Black woman was sworn in, after Laphonza Butler was appointed.
None of them overlapped in the Senate, each serving as the sole Black woman in the overwhelmingly white and male 100-member chamber sometimes referred to as the world’s greatest deliberative body.
All that may be about to change in what Democrats are hoping to make the year of the Black woman in the Senate. With two Black women in strong positions to claim open Senate seats in blue states — and Ms. Harris now at the top of the ticket — they are preparing for what they regard as a long-overdue moment when their numbers could double, even if only to two.
“I’m so excited that we are about to move beyond the acceptance of having just one,” said Ms. Butler, a California Democrat, speaking on Friday at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Annual Legislative Conference in downtown Washington. “We’re going to be bold enough to send two.”
Ms. Butler, who is not running for re-election, was seated next to Representative Lisa Blunt Rochester, Democrat of Delaware, who is all but assured to win the seat being vacated by Senator Thomas R. Carper.
Next to them was Angela Alsobrooks, the Prince George’s County executive in Maryland, who holds a slight lead over Larry Hogan, the former Republican governor, in public polls. Ms. Alsobrooks emerged in May from a competitive primary to replace Senator Ben Cardin, Democrat of Maryland, who is retiring.
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Source: nytimes.com