At Kamala Harris’ election night party at Howard University, the hope to ‘witness history’
WASHINGTON — Revelers attending the Harris-Walz campaign’s election night party at Howard University were looking to celebrate a night of firsts.
Thousands had gathered at the Yard, a large open space on the Washington, D.C., campus, hoping to cheer the election of the first Black woman to the presidency. If that comes to pass, there would be another milestone to toast: Kamala Harris, a Howard alumna, would become the first president to graduate from a historically Black college or university.
That wished-for breakthrough animated much of the action on the Yard, where students and alumni were dancing even before Howard’s gospel choir sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” the hymn adopted by some as a Black national anthem.
“I am here to celebrate the moment — hopefully to witness history, as the first female is elected president,” said Rob Jenkins, 54, who graduated from Howard in 1992. An attorney from Fort Washington, Md., he said his freshman year coincided with Harris’ last one there. “If successful … the fact that she is from Howard University, [that’s] another tremendous accomplishment.”
The event, which began around 7 p.m., was a showcase for Howard and the wider network of schools catering to mostly African American students. Many attendees wore their sorority or fraternity colors — a celebration of a storied strand of Black culture in America.
“It means so much more than you can imagine,” said Marissa Jennings, 43, who grew up in the Crenshaw neighborhood of Los Angeles and attended Bennett College, a historically Black institution in North Carolina.
Jennings recounted parts of Harris’ biography — how she was born and raised in California, attended an HBCU, and served as both a senator and vice president. And now, she said, Harris has “the opportunity to become the first woman and first African American woman president, it was something I couldn’t have dreamed of.”
The scene at Howard was suffused with nervous energy, much of it directed toward a large screen showing CNN’s election coverage. People grew increasingly anxious, and the festivities were dampened, when the network’s John King said that Harris trailed President Biden’s performance in the 2020 election in key areas.
Harris’ time at Howard — she graduated from the school in 1986 — helped shape her political identity. During her unsuccessful bid for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2019, Harris took to telling voters that her toughest political race was at the university, where she won a seat on the Liberal Arts Student Council during her freshman year, The Times has reported. At the time, Howard was a crucible of political activism.
“I reference often my days at Howard to help people understand they should not make assumptions about who black people are,” Harris told The Times in 2019.
The vice president was also a member of the Howard chapter of the Alpha Kappa Alpha, the country’s first Black sorority. Among attendees at the Tuesday night event were many women wearing the organization’s signature salmon pink and apple green colors.
Before King’s pronouncement, the crowd, heavy on current Howard students and alumni, danced to music by Prince, Missy Elliott and Ciara — and cheered whenever the CNN telecast revealed that Harris was projected to win a state. But there were choruses of boos each time CNN announced that Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was projected to pick one up.
“I wanted to be a part of history — good, bad or indifferent,” said Camille Thelemaque, 38, a graduate of North Carolina A&T State University, a historically Black institution. “I thought it was my place to be here and celebrate Black achievement, achievement as an American, achievement as a woman. We’re all fighting for the same cause. And I wanted to be here for what could be a historic moment.”
Harris was expected to address the crowd in front of Frederick Douglass Memorial Hall, a columned brick building flanked by American flags, by night’s end.
Mehta and Bierman reported from Washington and Miller from Los Angeles.