Kamala Harris recognizes contributions of Caribbean Americans
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U.S. Vice President-elect Kamala Harris makes a speech after U.S. President-elect Joe Biden announced their nominee for secretary of education, Miguel Cardona in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S., Dec. 23, 2020.REUTERS/Leah Millis,FileGmailFacebookMore10
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Caribbean American United States Vice President-elect Sen. Kamala Harris Sunday night recognized the contributions of Caribbean Americans in a virtual message commemorating her expected, historic inauguration on Wednesday.
“Those contributions are reflected in the lives of so many Americans with Caribbean roots — from Eric Holder and Colin Powell to Shirley Chisholm,” Harris, the daughter of a Jamaican father and Indian mother, told the star-studded virtual concert that was pioneered by Guyanese-born entrepreneur, advocate and journalist, Felicia J. Persaud, and presented by Persaud-owned Invest Caribbean and the Caribbean American Action Network, (CAAN).
Persaud is also founder and chief executive officer of the online news outlet New Americas, and Invest Caribbean, the global private sector, investment agency of the Caribbean.
Holder, a former US Attorney General, traces his roots to Barbados; Powell, an erstwhile US Secretary of State, is the son of Jamaican immigrants; and the late Chisholm – a former US congresswoman representing Brooklyn, who was the first woman to seek the nomination of a major party (Democratic Party) for US president — was the daughter of Barbadian and Guyanese immigrants.
Harris told viewers that she was “proud to be with you, as a vice-president elect with roots in the Caribbean.
“President-elect Joe Biden and I look forward to working with you every step of the way to usher in a brighter future for Caribbean Americans and all Americans,” she said.
“Thank you for the efforts that so many of you have many of you have made throughout the course of the campaign to get us to this moment,” she added. “You did the work. You helped lay the groundwork for this historic occasion. Now, because of you and so many others, our country is on a path to heal and rebuild.”
In her introductory address, Persaud hoped that Harris, “the US’ first Black Caribbean American vice-president, makes it possible for the Caribbean region to take its rightful place as a strong partner with these United States.
“We are here to resolve tonight that Caribbean immigrants in these United States will no longer be taken for granted; will no longer be ignored and left behind; will no longer have our votes taken and then dismissed like we are nothing,” she said.
“Our challenge to you, dear vice-president-elect, is that you become a fighter for the Caribbean; that you use your Caribbean ancestry and your Caribbean heritage to make a mark in history — and not simply be just another US vice-president,” she added. “Kamala Harris, we celebrate you, but we are also going to be watching you.”
Harris, a former California Attorney General officially resign on Monday from her US Senate seat in California, culminating her four-year US Senate career.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom has already named the state’s secretary of state, Alex Padilla, as Harris’s replacement.
US Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor is expected to swear in Harris on Wednesday as US vice president.
Sunday night’s gala ceremony featured, among others, Jamaican dancehall and reggae stars Flourgon and Nadine Sutherland, respectively, and Barbadian soca star Edwin Yearwood.
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