Sen. Kamala Harris is adding several women of color to her presidential campaign team, an aide told POLITICO.
Emmy Ruiz, a political strategist who served as Hillary Clinton’s state director in Nevada and Colorado in 2016, will be a senior adviser to Harris. Ruiz will counsel the campaign on electoral, political and field strategy.
Ruiz was a field director for the Democratic National Committee in Texas and Nevada in 2012 before serving as President Barack Obama’s Nevada state director during the general election. Her experience includes serving as political director of Annie’s List, a group working to elect women in Texas, and campaign manager for comprehensive immigration reform at Organizing for Action, Obama’s advocacy group.
Missayr Boker and Julie Chávez Rodriguez will serve as co-national political directors. Boker was the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee’s campaign director in 2018, helping Senate Democrats’ campaign arm pick up seats in Nevada and Arizona. Boker has also served as assistant political director and PAC director for NARAL Pro-Choice America, where she managed issue advocacy campaigns and electoral strategy, and an advocacy organization in Liberia that focused on reducing maternal mortality rates.
Rodriguez, the granddaughter of civil rights leader Cesar Chávez, comes from Harris’ Senate office, where she had worked as California state director since 2017. She was a special assistant to the president and senior deputy director for public engagement for Obama, overseeing the White House’s engagement with LGBT, Latino, veteran, youth, education, labor and progressive leaders.
Amanda Bailey, who raised money for now-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) as the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee’s finance director for the West, will be Harris’ deputy national finance director. Bailey previously served on finance teams for former Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.) and former Maryland Rep. Donna Edwards’ Senate campaign.
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Rosa Mendoza and Joyce Kazadi will serve as Harris analytics and advance directors, respectively. Mendoza was the DCCC’s head of analytics and a senior strategist. Kazadi was Axios’ partner engagement director and events director for Axios360. Kazadi was also national advance lead on Clinton’s 2016 campaign, producing events and executing trips in more than 20 contested states in the primary and general elections.
These women are among more than a dozen women of color in senior roles in Harris’ campaign, including campaign chairwoman Maya Harris, deputy national political director Jalisa Washington-Price, senior adviser Laphonza Butler and deputy national press secretary Kirsten Allen.
The campaign said each woman will be involved in key decisions throughout the race and that the hires reflect the California senator’s commitment to diversity.
“We value diverse backgrounds and experiences because they give our campaign vibrancy and fresh perspectives about the many challenges all Americans are facing,” campaign manager Juan Rodriguez said. “Sen. Harris has a history of elevating and amplifying all voices to ensure that nothing is seen through only one narrow point of view.”
Christopher Cadelago contributed to this report.