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Catch Me Featured on an NPR WABE Segment!

  • Writer: Nichelle Davis
    Nichelle Davis
  • Dec 3, 2020
  • 1 min read

Updated: Dec 3, 2020


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In this presidential election, suburban female voters have become an important voting bloc for both parties. For many Black suburban women voters who may not have had a seat at the table in the past, this year meant making their voices heard.


“Cobb County voter Nichelle Davis recently realized the power of the Black woman’s vote.”

Pundits predicted in February that Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign was all but over. But then came the South Carolina Democratic primary. Biden swept the contest with two-thirds of the Black vote.


That’s when Cobb County voter Nichelle Davis realized the power of the Black women’s vote.


“Where we literally as a voting bloc can propel people across the finish line when we all show up. So I feel like as a community, but specifically, as Black women who are leading this work… if we do our part?”


Davis hopes Black women like her will be part of that same voting bloc in Georgia. Especially in the 6th Congressional District, where Democrat Lucy McBath is running for reelection. This once-very-conservative suburban district has become more diverse in recent years.

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