Sunday, 29 Sep 2024

‘She’s our vision of the future’: Black Nevadans rallying for Harris hope to make history

‘She’s our vision of the future’: Black Nevadans rallying for Harris hope to make history


‘She’s our vision of the future’: Black Nevadans rallying for Harris hope to make history

Las Vegas's historic Westside has long been celebrated for its Black community's entrepreneurship, activism and resilience. The neighborhood became "historic" when America's first racially integrated casino, the Moulin Rouge, opened in 1955, employing Black card dealers and chorus line dancers, and welcoming singers such as Sammy Davis Jr and Ella Fitzgerald to not only perform, but to dine and gamble. Today, campaign organizers for Kamala Harris hope the community will play a history-making role again in November.

The 2024 presidential election could hinge on how Nevada swings. To win the key battleground state, Democrats will have to run up the score in Las Vegas to overcome deficits in rural counties and the evenly divided electorate in Reno.

About 10% of the state's population identifies as Black or African American, a majority of whom live in the Las Vegas Valley. According to the Harris campaign, this subset is fired up, and turnout and enthusiasm in the critical Democratic constituency may make a difference.

"It's been pandemonium," says Ishmael Carroll, the campaign's regional political director focused on outreach to southern Nevada's Black community. "I've been inundated with calls, texts, emails. It's complete excitement. In previous elections I had to go find people. People are calling me now first thing in the morning, late at night - 'How can I be involved? How can I participate? What can I do to help?'

"I think they identify the importance of this moment in our history," Carroll adds.

Lya Harvey, a 52-year-old nurse practitioner, is one of those first-time volunteers. Though she always votes, she had never attended rallies, volunteered or donated to a campaign before, she said.

"I'm really not that into politics, but given the situation right now between the two parties, I think it's necessary to be out here getting involved," she says. She's tired of the "mean and nasty" attacks that have divided communities and contributed to dysfunction in Washington.

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