‘I’m all about the straight talk’: Kamala Harris trades barbershop campaign stops for a blitz of Black media
Countless Democrats - and even Donald Trump - have tried to leverage the gathering spaces for political gain. But the vice-president's recent tour is about more than a photo op
Five years ago, with an eye toward South Carolina's 2020 Democratic presidential primary, Kamala Harris dropped by a barbershop in the state capital for a roundtable with a group of Black men led by 2 Live Crew's Luther Campbell, of Me So Horny fame. Pitted against some skeptical voters, Harris won the room over with her personal stories and willingness to let her hair down some. I'm all about straight talk, and there's no better place to do that than in the barbershop," she said. In that 20-minute discussion, which largely focused on entrepreneurship, Harris introduced many of the points that form the core of the Opportunity Agenda for Black Men unveiled this week.
The Black barbershop ranks among the most enduring tropes in American politics - the go-to place for office-seekers looking to win the Black male vote without getting into specifics. Democrats in particular have used the setting as their official co-sign, submitting to naturalistic photo-ops in hydraulic chairs with the fellas when they aren't directly addressing Black church congregations or glad-handing at fish fries. Even Donald Trump has leveraged the barbershop trope for his own ends, dropping by a Maga-friendly location in the Bronx on Thursday for a private meet-and-greet.
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