Civic News

The Senate has no Black women. Lisa Blunt Rochester’s bid could change that

The current Delaware representative said in her official campaign announcement that she is running to protect seniors, jobs, the environment and reproductive rights.

US Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester speaks to Delaware pre-apprentices in June 2021. (Courtesy photo)

Democratic Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester is officially running for the open Senate seat in deep-blue Delaware, with a good chance to be the next Black woman elected to a chamber that currently has none.

Blunt Rochester, 61, joined the House in 2017 as the first woman and person of color to represent Delaware in Congress. She is now running to replace longtime Sen. Tom Carper, her mentor, who announced plans to retire last month.

“It’s been the greatest honor of my life to represent Delaware, to protect our seniors, our environment, our small businesses and women’s reproductive rights. But we’ve got so much more to do,” Blunt Rochester said in a video launching her campaign.

The video, titled “Bright Hope,” focuses on hope after dark times, including her husband’s sudden death in 2014 and the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol. In the video, she wears a scarf imprinted with a voter roll showing her great-great-great-grandfather, who had been enslaved, had voted as a freed person in Reconstruction-era Georgia.

Blunt Rochester, who was once an intern in Carper’s office, has served in several high-profile jobs within Delaware state government, including deputy secretary of health and social services, secretary of labor and state personnel director.

She is a co-chair of President Joe Biden’s reelection campaign.

The Senate has had no Black women since Kamala Harris became the vice president; Harris was only the second Black woman to ever serve in the chamber.

Blunt Rochester has described her rise in politics as improbable. “It literally took 30 years before I even ran for Congress. And I did that after the unexpected death of my husband,” Blunt Rochester told Politico this month. “And I ran even though I had never run for anything, as a widow, over 50, Black, woman, and we made history.”

[Editor’s note: Check out Technical.ly’s story on Blunt Rochester’s 2021 visit to students of Claymont Community Center’s pre-apprenticeship program.]

This article was written by Mel Leonor Barclay for The 19th. It is republished here with permission via a Creative Commons license.
Companies: U.S. Government

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