Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., has announced her 2024 candidacy for the California Senate seat being vacated by Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein.
With a win, Lee would become just the second Black woman elected senator in the state, after the 2016 victory of the current vice president, Kamala Harris. Two other California Democrats, Reps. Katie Porter and Adam Schiff, have also declared their candidacy for Feinstein’s seat.
“No one is rolling out the welcome mat, especially for someone like me,” Lee says in a video announcing her Senate bid.
The video lists some of her key accomplishments as a California lawmaker, including her authorship of the state’s first Violence Against Women Act and a 1995 bill targeting hate crimes against LGBTQ people. In listing her accomplishments as a U.S. representative, Lee notes that she was the only member of Congress to vote against authorizing the war in Afghanistan, a fact that has made her into even more of an anti-war hero the more that Americans have discovered that U.S. officials misled the public about the war.
“For those who say my time has passed, well, when does making change go out of style?” the 76-year-old Lee asks in the video.
This race for Feinstein’s seat pits multiple Democratic stalwarts against one another at a time when cultural identity and representation are taking center stage in state politics. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom vowed to appoint a Black woman if Feinstein were to retire during his time as governor. He won’t have that opportunity with Feinstein stepping down at the end of her term. But last year’s unearthed audio of Latino members of the Los Angeles City Council using racist rhetoric against Black people has only increased Californians’ demands for more Black representation at the state and federal levels.
Meanwhile, Porter has built a strong reputation for herself as a fierce interrogator during congressional hearings, and Schiff, a former Blue Dog Democrat, gained a lot of…
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