NPR

'Fully Erased': With Harris' Rise, There Are No Black Women In The Senate

The lack of a Black woman in the Senate has turned a moment of triumph for many thrilled to see Kamala Harris ascend to the vice presidency into something more bittersweet.
Kamala Harris is sworn in as vice president by Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor as Harris' husband, Doug Emhoff, holds the Bible. Harris is the first woman to be vice president, and the first person of Black or Indian heritage to hold the office.

On the day that California Gov. Gavin Newsom named Kamala Harris' replacement in the U.S. Senate, Molly Watson jumped on a call with other organizers and the two Black women in Congress that they had urged Newsom to appoint to the seat instead.

It was an emotional conversation, in which Watson said she struggled to hold back tears.

"It cut pretty deep knowing that we were going to be fully erased from the Senate," Watson, of the progressive group Courage California, said.

While the Democratic Party is in control of the White House and both chambers of Congress, there is also a new fight playing out over representation. There are now no Black women in the Senate after an election cycle with key victories powered by Black women. It has turned a moment of triumph for many Black women thrilled to see Harris make a historic ascent to the vice presidency into something more bittersweet.

"Everybody else is represented in the U.S. Senate except for us, period," said Watson, one of the organizers who urged Newsom to select either Rep. Barbara Lee of

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