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But inside it, too, is the urgent and determined refusal of many Democratic female voters to accept the alternative—again. See them singing along during the dance party roll call at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Understand the mothers and daughters and sorority sisters and, yes, the men, brothers, and boys who have watched and waited and winced as the country tried eight years ago to break the glass ceiling—and failed. This time, this year, facing Donald Trump again, a certain and influential swath of the electorate is not messing around.
The promise of a Harris presidency is shaking a sizable segment of the nation out of a political funk, reviving the idea of a milestone election and an alternative to repeating the Trump era. Once President Joe Biden bowed out of the race and embraced his vice president at the top of the ticket, some found hope where before they had felt mostly dread. As one woman said at the time, she threw up the next morning. For those voting for Harris, this election feels more joyful, but also more necessary and urgent.
Harris herself carries this potentially history-making moment not as a campaign feature but a matter-of-fact representation of who she is and has always been, much the way Barack Obama often left his race merely implied to voters. Rather than reminding voters that the nation's 47th president could become the first in its more than two-century history to not be a man, Harris is running instead on what she would do in the job and how she would do it. Many receive her style as a brand of American optimism rooted in the generations who came before her, a Black and South Asian woman, the daughter of immigrants—a Jamaican father and Indian mother—who dared to dream in this country.
So much has changed in the American political landscape since Trump entered that scene almost a decade ago with his braggadocio and electoral momentum. Angie Gialloreto of Pittsburgh was disappointed then.