Current:Home > MyHow high school activism put Barbara Lee on the path to Congress — and a fight for Dianne Feinstein's seat -Visionary Growth Labs
How high school activism put Barbara Lee on the path to Congress — and a fight for Dianne Feinstein's seat
View
Date:2025-04-25 20:35:00
California Congresswoman Barbara Lee is facing the fight of her career in the 2024 Senate election, but she says a lifelong passion for activism has given her all the motivation she needs as she campaigns for outgoing Sen. Dianne Feinstein's seat.
Lee, 77, has been in Congress since 1998, and is the highest-ranking African American woman appointed to Democratic leadership, according to her website. While visiting San Fernando High School in southern California, her alma mater, Lee told CBS News that it was when trying out for the cheerleading team that she first found her voice.
"There was a selection process and they had never selected a girl that looks like me. And so I went to the NAACP, and said, 'Look, I really want to be a cheerleader, but I can't make it through this process because I'm Black,'" Lee recalled.
Lee said that conversation led to a change in the selection process, and the victory inspired her. Today, she continues to fight racial bias in schools from her Congressional seat.
"Now I know that Black girls and girls of color are gonna be cheerleaders, and I mean, I was thinking like that at 15 and 16 years old," Lee said. "I look at politics and public service as being able to not tinker around the edges, but dismantling systems that are barriers for full and equal opportunity for everyone."
Another high school experience would go on to inform her beliefs: Lee told CBS News that she had had an illegal abortion at the time.
"It was a dark back alley, it was about 10:30 at night.The doc had a white coat on, there was light above the bed. I mean, I remember it very vividly, like it was yesterday," said Lee. She said she hid the abortion from "everybody" in her life at the time.
"To live with that trauma and that stigma, the fear around it, the shame around it ... I felt horrible."
Lee, who spoke passionately against the decision to overturn Roe v. Wade on the House floor, said that she "never" expected to see the United States return to a point where people would again have to fight for the right to an abortion.
Those two high school experiences informed her beliefs, but it wasn't until college that Lee's passion for politics was ignited. At Mills College in Oakland, California, she met Shirley Chisholm, the first African-American woman elected to Congress in 1968. According to Lee's website, she invited Chisholm to campus as the president of school's Black Student Union. Their meeting led Lee to register to vote for the first time, and she worked on Chisholm's 1972 presidential campaign and served as a delegate for Chisholm at the Democratic National Convention.
Today, Lee is in what might be the toughest fight of her political life. She is competing with representatives Katie Porter and Adam Schiff in the race for the 90-year-old Feinstein's Senate seat. Porter is known for her tough questioning in the House Oversight Committee, while Schiff is backed by former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Schiff and Porter also have more money in their campaign coffers.
But Lee said the finances aren't detering her.
"Well, it's not I have fallen behind. I have been raising money over the years for our Democratic Party, for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, for women, for women of color," she said. "And in fact, the barriers to raising money are there. But that's not gonna stop me."
If elected, Lee will be the only Black woman in the Senate. It would be another achievement for Lee, who still remembers her early childhood growing up in segregated El Paso, Texas, and who heard her parents warn each other about cross burnings in San Leandro, a city she now represents.
"Representation matters," Lee said. "We want everybody to have an opportunity to live the American dream."
- In:
- United States Congress
- United States Senate
- Politics
- California
Kerry Breen is a news editor and reporter for CBS News. Her reporting focuses on current events, breaking news and substance use.
veryGood! (3661)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Billie Eilish Fires Back at Critics Calling Her a Sellout for Her Evolving Style
- Inside the Love Lives of the Stars of Succession
- Checking in on the Cast of Two and a Half Men...Men, Men, Men, Manly Men
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Intermittent fasting is as effective as counting calories, new study finds
- A smarter way to use sunscreen
- American Climate Video: Al Cathey Had Seen Hurricanes, but Nothing Like Michael
- Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
- Coronavirus Already Hindering Climate Science, But the Worst Disruptions Are Likely Yet to Come
Ranking
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- OceanGate co-founder voiced confidence in sub before learning of implosion: I'd be in that sub if given a chance
- New U.S., Canada, Mexico Climate Alliance May Gain in Unity What It Lacks in Ambition
- Q&A: A Harvard Expert on Environment and Health Discusses Possible Ties Between COVID and Climate
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Madonna postpones tour while recovering from 'serious bacterial infection'
- Get $91 Worth of MAC Cosmetics Eye Makeup for Just $40
- Teen who walked six miles to 8th grade graduation gets college scholarship on the spot
Recommendation
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Locust Swarms, Some 3 Times the Size of New York City, Are Eating Their Way Across Two Continents
Two years after Surfside condo collapse, oldest victim's grandson writes about an Uncollapsable Soul
A Warming Climate is Implicated in Australian Wildfires
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
He was diagnosed with ALS. Then they changed the face of medical advocacy
American Climate Video: On a Normal-Seeming Morning, the Fire Suddenly at Their Doorstep
Titan sub implosion highlights extreme tourism boom, but adventure can bring peril