Getting beyond symbolism to substance

“Next year presents a fresh opportunity for journalists to get past the sparkle of the ‘first’ and into the substance of how women and people of color campaign, get elected, and govern.”

The start of 2021 saw the historic inauguration of Vice President Kamala Harris as our country’s second most powerful person — the first time a woman has had the distinction of serving in the role.

President Joe Biden has also nominated and appointed a record number of women and people of color to his administration, several of whom are pioneers in their respective offices. And several Black women broke barriers this year to become the first mayors of their race and gender in cities across the country.

Many of these “firsts” stepped into the spotlight and were touted for their ceiling-breaking accomplishments. But what does it all really mean?

Less attention has been paid, particularly at the national level, to their actual governing. What they do in office is at least as important for changing attitudes and imaginations in our democracy about who gets to lead as the novelty in them being first. How they perform directly impacts what representation and power look like, and how the leadership of women, ethnic minorities, and other marginalized groups becomes normalized in our political coverage.

Recent headlines about Harris have ranged from a focus on disarray in her office to incredulity over her use of Bluetooth headphones to an uproar over her purchase of an expensive cooking pot during a diplomatic trip to France.

Harris is being urged to reset her tenure as bad press fuels questions about her competency and political future. Similar public scrutiny has been lobbed at countless elected politicians at some point in their tenure. And everyone moves on. The difference here is that historic and institutional firsts are easier targets because of their newness.

To be curious as journalists is not to treat these candidates and elected officials as curiosities. Stories that show them just doing their jobs — shaping and implementing policy, meeting with local, state, national, and world leaders, even interacting with their families — display their leadership in ways that capture both the political with the personal and help to familiarize the foreign.

As journalists, holding the powerful accountable through reporting that evaluates their leadership isn’t just fair game — it’s part of our job. Harris’ political and governing missteps as vice president are newsworthy. And while palace intrigue and cultural moments also come with covering any administration, such coverage should be balanced with stories on what women and ethnic minority leaders like the vice president are actually doing on the issues they can reasonably influence.

Next year presents a fresh opportunity for journalists to get past the sparkle of the “first” and into the substance of how women and people of color campaign, get elected, and govern. At least five Black women will attempt to become America’s first Black woman governor. Getting beyond their symbolism to scrutinize their campaigns and policy pledges — as we should do with any candidate — helps voters to envision a competent person of any gender or color in roles that have been traditionally filled by people who are male and white.

We would do well not to let our initial coverage of these firsts be the last words we write on their political careers. Otherwise, we risk reducing the potentially transformative to the performative.

Errin Haines is editor-at-large at The 19th.

The start of 2021 saw the historic inauguration of Vice President Kamala Harris as our country’s second most powerful person — the first time a woman has had the distinction of serving in the role.

President Joe Biden has also nominated and appointed a record number of women and people of color to his administration, several of whom are pioneers in their respective offices. And several Black women broke barriers this year to become the first mayors of their race and gender in cities across the country.

Many of these “firsts” stepped into the spotlight and were touted for their ceiling-breaking accomplishments. But what does it all really mean?

Less attention has been paid, particularly at the national level, to their actual governing. What they do in office is at least as important for changing attitudes and imaginations in our democracy about who gets to lead as the novelty in them being first. How they perform directly impacts what representation and power look like, and how the leadership of women, ethnic minorities, and other marginalized groups becomes normalized in our political coverage.

Recent headlines about Harris have ranged from a focus on disarray in her office to incredulity over her use of Bluetooth headphones to an uproar over her purchase of an expensive cooking pot during a diplomatic trip to France.

Harris is being urged to reset her tenure as bad press fuels questions about her competency and political future. Similar public scrutiny has been lobbed at countless elected politicians at some point in their tenure. And everyone moves on. The difference here is that historic and institutional firsts are easier targets because of their newness.

To be curious as journalists is not to treat these candidates and elected officials as curiosities. Stories that show them just doing their jobs — shaping and implementing policy, meeting with local, state, national, and world leaders, even interacting with their families — display their leadership in ways that capture both the political with the personal and help to familiarize the foreign.

As journalists, holding the powerful accountable through reporting that evaluates their leadership isn’t just fair game — it’s part of our job. Harris’ political and governing missteps as vice president are newsworthy. And while palace intrigue and cultural moments also come with covering any administration, such coverage should be balanced with stories on what women and ethnic minority leaders like the vice president are actually doing on the issues they can reasonably influence.

Next year presents a fresh opportunity for journalists to get past the sparkle of the “first” and into the substance of how women and people of color campaign, get elected, and govern. At least five Black women will attempt to become America’s first Black woman governor. Getting beyond their symbolism to scrutinize their campaigns and policy pledges — as we should do with any candidate — helps voters to envision a competent person of any gender or color in roles that have been traditionally filled by people who are male and white.

We would do well not to let our initial coverage of these firsts be the last words we write on their political careers. Otherwise, we risk reducing the potentially transformative to the performative.

Errin Haines is editor-at-large at The 19th.

Joe Amditis

Jim Friedlich

Joy Mayer

Kristen Jeffers

Kerri Hoffman

Juleyka Lantigua

Paul Cheung

Cindy Royal

Jesse Holcomb

John Davidow

Sarah Stonbely

Wilson Liévano

Tamar Charney

Robert Hernandez

Rachel Glickhouse

Natalia Viana

Laxmi Parthasarathy

Catalina Albeanu

Tom Trewinnard

Jessica Clark

Mandy Jenkins

Andrew Freedman

David Skok

Chase Davis

Brian Moritz

Matt Karolian

Moreno Cruz Osório

Anthony Nadler

Amy Schmitz Weiss

James Green

Millie Tran

Richard Tofel

Joni Deutsch

Sam Guzik

Mary Walter-Brown

Jennifer Brandel

Megan McCarthy

Gabe Schneider

Anita Varma

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen

A.J. Bauer

Errin Haines

S. Mitra Kalita

Daniel Eilemberg

Alice Antheaume

Jonas Kaiser

Amara Aguilar

Izabella Kaminska

Melody Kramer

Francesco Zaffarano

Kendra Pierre-Louis

Matt DeRienzo

Eric Nuzum

Jody Brannon

Christina Shih

Joanne McNeil

David Cohn

Sarah Marshall

Mario García

Mike Rispoli

j. Siguru Wahutu

Burt Herman

Tony Baranowski

Jesenia De Moya Correa

Stefanie Murray

Doris Truong

Parker Molloy

Ariel Zirulnick

Raney Aronson-Rath

Gordon Crovitz

Simon Allison

Matthew Pressman

Janelle Salanga

Simon Galperin

Anika Anand

Don Day

Michael W. Wagner

Kathleen Searles & Rebekah Trumble

Meena Thiruvengadam

Joshua P. Darr

Shalabh Upadhyay

Candace Amos

Whitney Phillips

Ståle Grut

Zizi Papacharissi

Kristen Muller

Cherian George

Larry Ryckman

AX Mina

Shannon McGregor & Carolyn Schmitt

Jennifer Coogan

Julia Munslow

Gonzalo del Peon

Stephen Fowler

Cristina Tardáguila

Nikki Usher

Victor Pickard

Christoph Mergerson

Chicas Poderosas

Julia Angwin