They're fueled by Democrat Doug Jones' stunning upset Senate win, the #MeToo movement, opposition to Trump and a desire to carry on Obama's legacy.
by Adam Edelman
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — It's an unlikely location for a political
uprising: A onetime drug rehab center in an office park, where metal
bars still line the windows and the hum from the nearby I-20/I-59
overpass is constant.
But it is here that Jameria Moore, a
49-year-old attorney, launched her campaign for a judgeship on the
Jefferson County Probate Court. She is one of about three dozen
African-American women who are running for office as Democrats across
deep-red Alabama.
It's an unprecedented number, according to party officials. Many,
like Moore, are running for the first time. And many, like Moore, say
Democrat Doug Jones' unexpected Senate victory in December inspired them
to take a chance.
But there's more to this wave of black women candidates than that.
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Source: NBC News
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