Inside the organizing call for Harris

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Jul 22, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO New York Playbook PM

By Sally Goldenberg and Jason Beeferman

Vice President Kamala Harris arrives at an event honoring NCAA winners at the White House.

Vice President Kamala Harris (center) at the White House today. The organization Win With Black Women held a Zoom call in support of Harris with tens of thousands of attendees on Sunday. | Stephen Voss for POLITICO

ZOOM IN: After a month of doom, Democrats Zoomed.

Within hours of President Joe Biden’s bombshell news Sunday that he would not run for reelection, tens of thousands of Black women across the country — including many in New York — launched an ambitious organizing effort for Vice President Kamala Harris.

State Attorney General Tish James, New York-based consultants Lupe Todd-Medina, Amelia Adams, Tyquana Henderson-Rivers and Rachel Noerdlinger were among the Empire State women on Sunday evening’s “Win With Black Women” virtual call, according to a list of names provided to POLITICO. The organization formed in 2020 to support Black female candidates for elected office.

Other New Yorkers on the Zoom included NAACP New York President Hazel Dukes, Brooklyn state Sen. Roxanne Persaud, Long Island Assemblymember Michaelle Solages, Higher Heights for America PAC president Glynda Carr and Planned Parenthood CEO Alexis McGill Johnson.

Tens of thousands of participants joined the call, raising $1.5 million, according to a social media post and a participant granted anonymity to share details about what was meant to be an off-record gathering. And they provided strategy memos and talking points as they coalesce behind a candidate who would be the nation’s first female president.

“We need to defend our sister everywhere,” read the meeting notes obtained by POLITICO. “It is a ‘thing’ to have MAGA world chasing you.”

Organizers behind the memo urged anyone reading it to “pick at least one section or a part of a section of Project 2025 to read and become a subject matter expert in order to be armed w/ info & to support the effort that way.” Project 2025 is an expansive policy document written with input from former advisers of Donald Trump — the Republican candidate and his team have sought to distance themselves from it while Democrats dial up their warnings about what’s in it.

The strategy plan also urged attendees to persuade Democratic Party delegates to sign a pledge endorsing Harris. “She needs 300 to get her name for the nomination; they want to secure over 2K delegates,” it read.

And it highlighted what organizers perceive to be her best attributes, including her facetime as VP with foreign leaders. “She can make age and vigor an issue,” it read, drawing an implicit contrast to the 81-year-old Biden — and 78-year-old Trump.

Harris will not have an easy road.

Republicans immediately piled on Sunday, citing the White House’s handling of the ongoing border crisis with which she was tasked. (Polling consistently shows Americans are unhappy with the Biden administration’s handling of immigration, sparked by concerns over the situation at the southern border.)

Some progressives previously voiced concern about her history as a prosecutor, while conservatives are questioning her commitment to Israel — an issue with deep resonance in New York.

And polling shows Trump with an advantage in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Michigan — battlegrounds critical for Democrats’ success in November. (Polling with Harris at the top of the ticket is limited since she hasn’t become the nominee yet.)

But those on the virtual call were ready to get organized.

“It was just really the excitement of Black women and our allies not wanting to miss this historic moment,” said Jotaka Eaddy, who founded Win With Black Women and organized the call.

The call was so well attended that some trying to join received a message saying the meeting reached its maximum number of participants, according to screenshots shared with POLITICO.

James, the attorney general, has also been working to gather the support of Black attorneys general for Harris, a former attorney general herself.

She announced Sunday that she and the five other Black state attorneys general in the U.S. — from Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Nevada — will be part of a coalition working to back Harris. They voiced their support for Harris in a joint statement Sunday evening.

Solages, the Long Island Assemblymember, said the call convinced her to stand behind the Vice President as the nominee.

“It really turned the course for me," she said, “and made me realize that our only option is supporting Kamala Harris for President.” — Sally Goldenberg and Jason Beeferman

 

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From the Capitol

Governor Kathy Hochul unveiled a housing project at the former site of the Bayview Correctional Facility in Manhattan.

Governor Kathy Hochul unveiled a housing project at the former site of the Bayview Correctional Facility in Manhattan. | Susan Watts/Office of Governor Kathy Hochul

HOUSING PLANS: The state is converting the former Bayview Correctional Facility on the west side of Manhattan into affordable housing, Gov. Kathy Hochul announced today.

The $108 million project at the shuttered jail will be developed by Camber Property Group and Osborne Association. It will contain 124 apartments, 74 of which will be set aside for formerly-incarcerated individuals.

Converting underutilized state-owned properties is a core piece of the governor’s housing agenda. “Now, a few years down the road, New Yorkers will be unlocking the doors to their beautiful homes in a place where people were once locked behind bars,” Hochul said today. — Janaki Chadha

IG BOOSTS PRISON OVERSIGHT: Inspector General Lucy Lang today appointed her office’s lead investigative attorney Jonathan Schultz to a post overseeing the state prison system an area that has been especially fruitful for inquiry.

Schultz will become the attorney-in-charge for the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision, overseeing audits and compliance programs as well as investigations of the agency.

“Jonathan's appointment represents a significant milestone in our ongoing commitment to ensure integrity within DOCCS," Lang said in a statement.

State prisons have been a focal point for the inspector general’s office, which probes executive branch agencies, departments and offices.

Lang two years ago created the special unit in her office to investigate the prison system. One probe found flaws in the department’s drug trusting program. Nick Reisman

AROUND NEW YORK

COALESCING BEHIND HARRIS: Rep. Pat Ryan, the front-line Democrat who was one of about 30 House members previously calling on Biden to withdraw, has endorsed Harris for president.

“Vice President Harris puts our Veterans first. Trump called my fellow servicemembers ‘suckers’ and ‘losers,’” Ryan, a combat veteran now representing the Hudson Valley and facing Republican Alison Esposito, posted on X. “The choice is clear, and the contrast is stark. Vice President Harris fights for freedom. Trump wants to take it away.”

John Avlon, the former CNN host challenging Rep. Nick LaLota on Long Island, was the first of the Democrats in the state’s six most competitive House races to back Harris. None of them had been ready to do so Sunday, when Biden announced he is no longer running for reelection.

“Yesterday was a day for honoring President Joe Biden’s historic presidency and his selfless decision to step aside from this election,” Avlon said in a statement. “Today is the day to pass the torch to a new generation.”

And Josh Riley, running upstate against Rep. Marc Molinaro, also appears to be with Harris, though not full-throatedly.

“It looks like she’s going to be the nominee; I’m going to support the nominee,” he told Playbook today. “I think she’ll do a much better job for folks here than the Trump-Molinaro agenda.” — Emily Ngo

— OVERSIGHT OUSTER: The chair of the police oversight board resigned after Mayor Adams reportedly forced her out. (The New York Times)

— I’LL ENDORSE YOU ANYWAY: Mayor Adams endorsed Kamala Harris as the presidential nominee mere hours after criticizing the Biden administration’s handling of U.S. immigration policy. (New York Post)

— HANGING UP THE PHONES: City schools are planning a student cellphone ban for February, principals say. (Chalkbeat NY)

Missed this morning’s New York Playbook? Read it here.

 

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