Stacey Abrams said she was “punished” for “refusing to refute” in 2020 comments

Defender of voting rights Stacey Abrams She said on Tuesday that she felt punished and insulted in the summer of 2020 while questioning her ability to hold the job of U.S. vice president when then-candidate Joe Biden was considering choosing her as a running mate. Abrams spoke with author NK Jemison on the first day of the South by Southwest festival, which is being held almost this year.

“I was punished for refusing to refute and pretend I didn’t have the ability to do the job because I didn’t have the title and positions that people were used to seeing,” Abrams said, adding that he was asked an issue that very few people have to contend with.

“There were all these insults as opposed to looking at the fundamental question. They asked me the question that white men don’t ask me, ‘Are you qualified?’ Abrams said.

The former Georgia secretary of state said there is “absolutely a nuisance” to society with “the audacity of people of color thinking we belong in the spaces and declaring that we deserve access.”

In 2018, Abrams lost the race for Georgia governor against Republican Brain Kemp by less than 55,000 votes. He said the “blockade of so many thousands of voters certainly had an impact on the outcome” and jokingly referred to the trajectory of his career as “an asymptote of success”.

“I’m very, very close to crossing the line, but never crossing it,” Abrams said. He noted that he has been able to become more involved in voting rights activism “due to an act of treachery on the part of someone in power who decided that people who looked like me should not be they were supposed to be so active and proactive in their politics. “

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