Kamala Harris' nomination ignites local organizers to rally Black
voters
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[August 19, 2024]
By Bianca Flowers, Disha Raychaudhuri, Gabriella Borter
and Allende Miglietta
(Reuters) - Black grassroots organizers are kicking off multi-state bus
tours and raising millions of dollars for voter engagement and
mobilization efforts in key battleground states, in hopes of helping
secure Vice President Kamala Harris' White House bid ahead of the
November presidential election.
Reuters spoke with more than a dozen groups that are ramping up
get-out-the-vote efforts through digital organizing, door-knocking, and
targeting low-propensity voters in swing states.
Black voters will play a pivotal role in the election, with both Harris
and Republican nominee Donald Trump vying for their support, which could
help sway the electoral outcome in states expected to have razor thin
margins.
Black communities have historically been viewed as the Democratic
Party's most loyal voting bloc. But Black voter support for President
Joe Biden had dropped earlier this year, largely driven by pocketbook
issues, such as high inflation and the rising cost of living, as well as
a lack of progress on racial justice efforts.
Harris, who would become the first Black woman and South Asian person to
become president, now leads Trump 42% to 37%, according to an August
Reuters/Ipsos poll, but experts and advocates said the challenge will be
to transform excitement into voter turnout.
LaTosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter Fund, said grassroots
organizing will be crucial in turning out Black voters in Georgia,
southern belt states and swing states. Brown's organization is embarking
on a get-out-to vote bus tour across 20 states now through Nov. 5. The
organization is planning to fill up two charter buses and 20 bus vans
with volunteers.
"Some of my friends who I've been trying to get engaged in this
election, they'd say 'oh yeah, I'm going to vote'," Brown said. "Now,
they are going beyond saying 'I'm going to vote' but 'put me to work.'"
Organizers in Georgia, the state that helped clinch Biden's 2020
presidency and two key U.S. Senate Democratic seats, plan to again
galvanize a multiracial coalition of voters.
Black Voters Matter Fund is collaborating with more than 100 local
community groups across Georgia and other states to enhance
get-out-the-vote efforts which Brown believes will help them reach an
estimated 10 million voters.
Makiah Reeves, a 22-year-old nursing student in Georgia plans to join
hundreds of volunteers on the bus tour to energize young Black voters,
who she believes remain apathetic. She'll be participating in a
youth-focused campaign that includes historically Black college campuses
outreach events.
"To hear a lot of young people say they just don't want to vote, it
needs to change," Reeves said.
The NAACP announced earlier this year the launch of Building Community
Voice Fund, a non-partisan, multi-million dollar fund established to
provide grants to nonprofit voter registration and voter turnout
initiatives and organizations, including complementary voter education
and voter protection programs.
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LaTosha Brown, co-founder of Black Voters Matter Fund, stands for a
portrait in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. July 23, 2024. REUTERS/Alyssa
Pointer/File photo
Last week, nine advocacy groups formed the Black Power Voters
Alliance to mobilize 1.6 million Black voters in seven states.
Groups like BlackPAC, a left-leaning political action committee, are
pouring millions into their voter outreach efforts. BlackPAC said it
is spending $30 million in Black voter outreach in battleground
states.
Grassroots leaders are also implementing safety measures to protect
volunteers amid concerns about political violence.
"Where we do field work, we always have security now," said Melanie
Campbell, president of National Coalition on Black Civic
Participation.
Elijah Grace, the New Georgia Project Action Fund's Director of
Field Operations said they're training door-knocking canvassers on
de-escalation techniques.
CHALLENGES AHEAD FOR HARRIS CAMPAIGN
Despite high enthusiasm for Harris, a significant disparity remains
among likely voter turnout between younger and older Black voters,
said Terrance Woodbury, chief executive of public opinion research
firm HIT Strategies.
"Black voters under 50 are more than half of the electorate and
remain the least likely voters," Woodbury said, adding researchers
are continuing to examine the reasons why. "It's a gap in their vote
choice and it's a gap in their decision to vote or not vote at all."
With less than 80 days until the election, Harris' campaign hopes to
reengage disenchanted voters and lure undecided moderates.
Keisha Lance Bottoms, senior advisor to the Harris campaign and
former mayor of Atlanta, said trusted local community members should
be deployed to communicate Harris' platform and accomplishments.
"There's a really strong record to run on from the Biden Harris
administration," Bottoms said. The campaign has yet to reveal
specific policy platforms addressed to the Black communities.
Yet, they still face the challenge of luring undecided voters. Many
pro-Palestinian activists have said they refuse to vote for Harris
without commitments towards changing U.S. policy towards Israel.
Thousands are expected to protest the Biden administration outside
the Democratic National Convention this week.
Republican strategist Jon Fleischman said Harris and Trump can count
on deep support from their respective bases, but that alone won't
translate into winning the election.
“They both have an identity that they feel will really appeal to
their base, and at the same time, they both need to figure out how
to get to that undecided swing voter," he said.
(Reporting by Bianca Flowers, Disha Raychaudhuri, Gabriella Borter
and Allende Miglietta; Editing by Kat Stafford)
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