New Delhi: Chidanand Rajghatta, a well-known journalist and author, has written a biography of Kamala Harris, the first female Vice President of the United States of America, titled "Kamala Harris: Phenomenal Woman" (USA). Within a narrative that has increasingly become one of division and hate, a storey of love and resilience emerges. This is a storey about immigration and immigrants, as well as the growing influence of the Indian diaspora in the United States. This is the storey of a mixed-race woman who perseveres. Kamala's storey is told here.
When a woman becomes president on her own, she is shown struggling to balance work and family life, which is something men are rarely expected to do. Leslie McCloud discovers she is pregnant in the 1964 comedy Kisses for My President and resigns to devote herself full-time to her family.
President Julia Mansfield has to manage her political fortunes while raising her family in the 1985 ABC sitcom Hail to the Chief. In reality, American women have rarely visited the White House, unless as first ladies. Until now, that is. Until Kamala Harris, a 2020 presidential candidate, became the country's forty-ninth vice president, a heartbeat away from the White House. The election of Kamala Harris as the United States' vice president on November 3, 2020, was a long-awaited watershed moment in American politics, especially after Hillary Clinton's defeat in 2016.
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