Former Vice President Joe Biden’s selection of
Harris wouldn’t reach that place alone. She’d
Women and Voting
strating in favor of suffrage, supported a constitutional amend- ment. The measure passed the House on May 21, 1919, the Senate on June 4, 1919, and went to the states for ratification. On August 18, 1920, Tennessee became the necessary 36th state to ratify the 19th amendment.
The Racial Divide
Middle class white women ran the women’s suffrage movement of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The 19th amendment didn’t mention race. It prohibited denying the vote on the basis of sex, but it didn’t uniformly benefit black women. African American women in northern and border states could and did register to vote after the amendment passed. Indeed, when it was challenged as violating Maryland’s state constitution which limited voting to men, one of the women involved was Mary D. Randolph, “a colored female citizen” of Baltimore who had registered along with a white woman, Cecilia Waters. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld their registration.
Things were different in the South, where local officials resisted voting by African Americans of either sex. Literacy tests, poll taxes (outlawed in the 1960s by the twenty-fourth amendment), and other barriers kept many black women from voting. Even before passage of the 19th amendment, black women
Only the 1965 Voting Rights Act finally addressed the problem by eliminating the barriers southern states used in keeping all blacks from voting. Though the statute didn’t mention sex, within a year of passage, it allowed registration of half a million African American voters in the South and ten million by 1980, many of them women.
Office Holding
The first woman elected to Congress reached
that body before enactment of the 19th amendment. Montana gave women the vote in 1914, six years before ratification of the federal suffrage amendment. Jeanette Rankin won a House of Representatives seat from Montana in 1916.Harris would go to the vice presidency from the U.S. Senate, where no woman sat until November 21, 1922, when 87-year old Rebecca Felton of Georgia was sworn in to serve one day in filling a vacancy. The first woman elected to the Senate was Hattie Caraway Arkansas’s in 1932. In 1978, Nancy Kassebaum of Kansas became the first woman elected to a full senate term whose husband hadn’t been in Congress before her.
Carol Mosley Braun won a U.S. Senate seat
Harris has often acknowledged how the career of Chisholm, a New York Democrat, influenced her. Chisholm became the first black woman elected to the House when she won her seat in 1968 and in 1972 became the first woman and the first black person to seek the presidential nomination of a major party.
In Part II we’ll look at the nation’s response to female vice presidential candidates and more deeply at Harris herself.
Please start a podcast so that your individual voices can literally be heard.
ReplyDeleteWe will definitely look into this - thanks!
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