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Inside the network of powerful Black women raising millions for Kamala Harris

By
Ruth Umoh
Ruth Umoh
and
Nina Ajemian
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September 30, 2024, 8:54 AM ET
Jotaka Eaddy launched Win With Black Women after seeing racist abuse directed at prominent women.
Jotaka Eaddy launched Win With Black Women after seeing racist abuse directed at prominent women.Jared Soares for Fortune

Good morning, Broadsheet readers! WeightWatchers CEO Sima Sistani is leaving the company, supermodel Naomi Campbell was banned as a trustee from her nonprofit, and Ruth Umoh, editor of Fortune’s Next to Lead franchise goes inside the network of powerful Black women backing Kamala Harris for president. Have a meaningful Monday!

– A fundraising force. On Sunday, July 21, some 44,000 Black women gathered on a Zoom call following President Joe Biden’s termination of his presidential reelection campaign and subsequent backing of Vice President Kamala Harris as the new Democratic nominee. 

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Chief among the attendants were corporate heavyweights like Dallas Mavericks’ CEO Cynt Marshall, the first Black woman to lead an NBA team; Shannon Nash, the former CFO of drone delivery service Wing; Susan Chapman, a former Amex executive and board director at Toast and J.M. Smucker; and Ulili Onovakpuri, a managing partner at the VC firm Kapor Capital.

These women are longtime members of Win With Black Women (WWBW), an influential, under-the-radar network of powerful Black women. And for four years, their Sunday Zoom calls have been a weekly ritual. “The group is a love letter from Black women to Black women,” its founder, Jotaka Eaddy, told me in a recent feature for Fortune’s Most Powerful Women issue.

Jotaka Eaddy launched Win With Black Women after seeing racist abuse directed at prominent women.
Jared Soares for Fortune

Eaddy, a social impact consultant in politics and tech, launched the network in response to the racist and misogynistic abuse she saw hurled against Black female politicians. “I just remember thinking to myself, ‘If we allow this to happen to these Black women, then what is happening to Black women that don’t have those platforms, that aren’t famous, [and] are not at a level of vice presidential nominee potential?…What is happening to the ‘Tamikas’ in the workplace?” Eaddy said.

WWBW’s membership has swelled in the years since, almost exclusively through word of mouth as an if-you-know-you-know grassroots campaign. The group played a sizable role in the release of WNBA star Brittney Griner from a Russian prison, the appointment of economist Lisa Cook to the Federal Reserve Board (the first Black woman in its 110-year history), and Ketanji Brown Jackson’s confirmation as the first Black female Supreme Court justice. WWBW has also wielded its influence in entertainment and sports, rallying behind Black female authors to place them on bestseller lists, paying for Black female athletes to attend the Olympics, and buying out theaters to support Black filmmakers.

Media mogul Oprah Winfrey has dropped in on several calls. Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, has also made an appearance.

The group has inspired a number of “unity groups” that fundraise over Zoom, including White Women: Answer the Call, White Dudes for Harris, Cat Ladies for Harris, and Tech4Kamala.

On that fateful Sunday—with 44,000 people on the Zoom call and 50,000 more tuning in from other streaming platforms—Black women were jubilant and hopeful. But they were also sober about the grueling task that lay before them: returning Harris to the White House. This time, as president. 

At the crux of that mission was an effort to raise $1 million in one month for the Harris campaign. By the call’s end, WWBW had raised more than $1.6 million.

Read my full article here.

Ruth Umoh
Editor, Next to Lead
ruth.umoh@fortune.com

The Broadsheet is Fortune’s newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Today’s edition was curated by Nina Ajemian. Subscribe here.

ALSO IN THE HEADLINES

- Leadership loss. WeightWatchers CEO Sima Sistani is exiting the company after two and a half years. The company’s stock lost 90% of its value this year, taking a sizable hit after Oprah Winfrey left the board in February. Tara Comonte, WeightWatchers board member and former Shake Shack CFO, is stepping in as interim CEO.CNN

- Not so charitable. Supermodel Naomi Campbell was banned from being a trustee of Fashion for Relief, the humanitarian relief nonprofit she founded in 2005. The group reportedly only spent 8.5% of its budget on charity work, instead splashing out on luxury experiences. Campbell said she was not responsible for the charity’s spending; her representatives did not respond to a request for comment.Fortune

- Fewer prescriptions. A new study shows that states with the most restrictive abortion bans saw a 5% drop in prescriptions for oral contraceptives the year after Roe v. Wade was overturned. Texas’s prescription rate decreased 28%. One key factor in the decline is the closing of abortion clinics in these states.The 19th

- Looking to the future. Safra Catz’s Oracle owns 29% of chipmaker Ampere Computing and, if it exercises investment options down the line, could own Ampere. Renee James, Ampere’s founder and CEO, announced that she will not run for reelection for her role of director. Oracle did not respond to a request for comment and Ampere declined to comment on Oracle’s filing.Bloomberg

MOVERS AND SHAKERS

Stratus Financial, a consumer finance platform, appointed Eljona Shkreli as managing director, investor relations. Shkreli most recently served as vice president, high net worth private banker associate at Citi.

Provi, an online beverage alcohol marketplace, named Christina Stella senior vice president of supplier partnerships. Most recently, she was the company’s vice president of brand partnerships.

TD Bank appointed Jill Gateman as co-head of U.S. commercial banking. Previously, Gateman was the bank’s head of U.S. middle market banking and sponsor financing.

Pegasystems, an AI decisioning and workflow automation platform, named Jackie McKinley head of Americas commercial sales. Most recently, she served as U.S. enterprise vice president at NetApp.

ON MY RADAR

The 27-year-old economic adviser for Gen ZWall Street Journal

How can we make fashion retail safe for women? Vogue Business

These women are trying to humanize the climate crisisThe 19th

PARTING WORDS

“I have often said to myself, ‘This may be the most important thing I ever do.’ To stand up for the women of the United States and their daughters and granddaughters—and the men that love them. This is an anthem.”

— Singer-songwriter Stevie Nicks on her new song “The Lighthouse,” inspired by her own abortion experience

This is the web version of MPW Daily, a daily newsletter for and about the world’s most powerful women. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.
About the Authors
By Ruth UmohEditor, Next to Lead
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Ruth Umoh is the Next to Lead editor at Fortune, covering the next generation of C-Suite leaders. She also authors Fortune’s Next to Lead newsletter.

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By Nina AjemianNewsletter Curation Fellow

Nina Ajemian is the newsletter curation fellow at Fortune and works on the Term Sheet and MPW Daily newsletters.

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