Boston Sunday Globe

Kamala Harris visits Martha’s Vineyard for two fund-raisers

- By Samantha J. Gross GLOBE STAFF Samantha J. Gross can be reached at samantha.gross@globe.com.

OAK BLUFFS — Vice President Kamala Harris swung through deep-pocketed Martha’s Vineyard this weekend, hitting two fund-raising events, then enjoying an overnight stay on the island before a scheduled departure to Washington, D.C., Sunday afternoon.

At a grass-roots fund-raiser at Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, Harris walked onstage to Beyoncé's 2022 hit “BREAK MY SOUL” in a tan blazer and white pants and gave a high-energy speech highlighti­ng accomplish­ments of the BidenHarri­s administra­tion and underscori­ng what is at stake in the 2024 presidenti­al election.

Throughout the speech, she wove in nods to administra­tion accomplish­ments, including the cap on insulin pricing, investment­s in high-speed internet, promises to remove lead pipes in communitie­s, and funding for clean-energy investment­s.

“Elections matter,” she said. “Real people are benefiting because of the work you have done.”

Harris was in Massachuse­tts last month, when she visited Boston to address the NAACP’s annual convention. During that trip, she made a surprise visit to Roxbury Community College in Boston, where she joined a town hall-style meeting.

Ahead of the vice president’s speech, those who introduced her — including her husband, Douglas Emhoff, and Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison — underscore­d the significan­ce of the event taking place in Oak Bluffs, which is known for being the country’s oldest summer community for Black vacationer­s.

More than 600 supporters filled the wooden stands and purple chairs set up in the warm gymnasium, fanning themselves with “reserved” signs and holding compliment­ary aluminum water bottles to their faces.

Tickets for the grass-roots event started at $50, with a $3,300 donation for preferred seating, $6,600 for priority seating, and $10,000 for “co-chair” status, which “includes photo,” according to the invitation.

Ayana Morris, a 37-year-old real estate developer from Newark, sat in the wooden bleachers with her 6-year-old son, Akhari, who played games on her cellphone. Morris was already on the island for a vacation in Chilmark.

“When she and Biden won, I’m sure every Black woman across the country, and I as well, felt like it was a moment for all of us,” Morris said. “I thought I would jump at the chance, I wanted my little one to be along for the experience.”

During her speech, Harris emphatical­ly spoke about what is at stake in 2024, highlighti­ng Republican-led initiative­s like expansion of abortion restrictio­ns and rollbacks of gun laws. She called some Republican­s “extremist, so-called leaders.”

She said Democrats “must be clear-eyed about what is afoot,” and reminded them of how they organized voters to turn out amid a global pandemic.

“It can’t just be about speeches, it has to be about getting stuff done,” she said. “And we have more work to do, especially as we are clear-eyed about the moment we are in, where I believe there is a national agenda to purposeful­ly attack hard-won freedoms and rights in America.”

Harris also made several thinly veiled references to Florida governor and 2024 Republican presidenti­al contender Ron DeSantis.

She alluded to a recent comment by DeSantis, who suggested Black people benefited from slavery, and spoke about Florida’s so-called “Don’t Say Gay” law and a recent decision by a Florida school district that some works by William Shakespear­e would run afoul of the law.

“I mean talk about ‘Much Ado About Nothing,’” she said. “If it weren’t so terrifying, it would be a comedy.”

Earlier in the day, Harris attended a smaller event at supporter Maria Harleston’s Martha’s Vineyard home.

There, she touched on similar topics in a 20-minute speech to attendees, who included Maryland Governor Wes Moore, former Black Entertainm­ent Television CEO Debra Lee, actor Don Cheadle, civil rights attorney Areva Martin, and comedian Chris Spencer.

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