ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 11月15日 07時38分


In an election dominated by fast-talking policy dudes, Abby Phillip’s deliberate commentary and context stood out.⁣

In 2020, the treatment of Black women (Breonna Taylor) and the political capital of Black women (Stacey Abrams and voters) has dominated news cycles. Phillip's commentary on CNN, as she predicted the election's outcome, took command of the moment. ⁣

“Black women did that,” @abbydphillip, a political correspondent, said on Nov. 6, narrating for America what the vote tallies coming in from Georgia and Pennsylvania were indicating and, perhaps more important, what they were signifying.⁣

“For Black women, this has been really a proving moment for their political strength, in carrying Joe Biden to the Democratic nomination through the primary,” she said.⁣

In the 52 hours over 5 days that the CNN trio — Jake Tapper, CNN’s chief Washington correspondent, Dana Bash, the network’s chief political correspondent, and Phillip — would hold court at that desk, there had been plenty of hot takes to fill the airtime. But as Phillip took command of this particular moment, pablum gave way to prose — or to a “historical poetry,” as she called it: recited in a slow, deliberate cadence distinct from the rat-tat-tat verbal spray that has typified cable news for a generation.⁣

“Not only would Black women put Joe Biden in the White House,” Phillip said on-air, predicting the finish, “but they would also put a Black woman in the White House.” And while “Donald Trump’s political career began with the racist birther lie,” she continued, “it may very well end with a Black woman in the White House.”⁣

Tap the link in our bio to read more about how Phillip is representing the next generation of CNN. Photo by @langstonpalmer


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