Women

Remarks by Vice President Harris in Moderated Conversation Following Her Historic Trip to Africa

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National Museum of African American History and Culture
Washington, D.C.

4:39 P.M. EDT
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT: Good afternoon, everybody.  (Laughs.)
    
AUDIENCE:  Good afternoon! 
    
MS. NABONGO:  Good afternoon.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Good afternoon.
    
MS. NABONGO:  It’s so nice to see you in D.C. —
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I know.
 
MS. NABONGO:  — after seeing you in Accra.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  The last time I saw you was in Ghana.
      
MS. NABONGO:  Yes.
     
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Just a few days ago probably.  (Laughs.)
    
MS. NABONGO:  Just a few days.  (Laughter.)  We have been country hopping.
 
And I have to say, for me, as someone — I’m an American-born Ugandan.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yeah.
    
MS. NABONGO:  I’ve been to all 54 countries on the continent.  And I used to work in development.  You know, I used to work for the U.N.  I used to consult for USAID.
    
So to receive that invitation was not only a huge honor, but, for me, I took it as a personal call to get more involved and understand what the country is doing on the continent.  So, thank you for the invitation. 
    
And I’m super excited to talk about what we learned on the continent about your goals for the continent, in partnership with the United States.  So let’s roll into it.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Okay. 
    
MS. NABONGO:  So, I think let’s start with how — or why did you decide to travel to the continent of Africa at this time.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  So, first of all, let me thank both of you for being such a big part of the trip.  I hope we can cover in this short time we all have together the layers of what that trip was and the nuances.
    
That being said — so, as Vice President of the United States, I have now traveled to many places around the world in my capacity as Vice President.  I have, at this point, met with over 100 world leaders, be they presidents, prime ministers, chancellors, or kings. 
    
And in these meetings and in these travels, it is always with a sense of the responsibility that we have as the United States of America to be present, to be engaged with our allies, with our partners, with people with whom we have great interdependence and intersection in so many ways.
    
And so, I have traveled all over the world, practically.  And this trip to the continent of Africa was very much in line with that approach but with an incredible sense of optimism about what is happening on the continent.
    
The median age on the continent of Africa is 19.  By 2050, one in four people occupying space on Mother Earth will be on the continent of Africa. 
    
Think about what that means in terms of the opportunity, in terms of the future, in terms of the obvious fact, I believe, as evidenced by the demographics I’ve just shared, which is that what happens on that continent will impact the entire globe. 
    
Not to mention what is the intertwined history that we have and share with the continent.  Not to mention the history and present innovation and ingenuity that is on that continent.  Not to mention what that continent has done to inform culture in so many ways around the globe. 
    
Not to mention the connection in terms of the diaspora and what that means in terms of the untapped yet — I think, in terms of maximized — power of the diaspora to participate in this partnership we have.
    
And so, all of that was the motivation for the trip and — and — as captured in the speech I gave our — our second full day there in Ghana.  And I wrote and delivered that speech with a very clear intention, which is to highlight the innovation and the excitement and the opportunity and the momentum that is happening there and what should be our engagement for so many, I think, at this point, obvious reasons.
    
And it was also in follow-up to the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit that we hosted here in December of last year, where our President, Joe Biden, made clear and said from a podium: The United States is all in on Africa.
    
And so it was my intention to reinforce that point and to explain what that means: “all in.”  All in as a partner, not to — to go in with a sense of, like, this is about our benevolence.  No, this is about a partnership with the continent and its leaders, tapping into all that is there.  (Applause.)
    
So, the speech I gave, as you know, was at the Black Star, at the monument, where independence is honored, and it’s about freedom and justice. And the speech was then — the emphasis was on the excitement that we feel and then to also talk about, in particular, then what we can do to uplift a couple of specific areas of focus for me, in terms of the trip and going forward.
 
And so, one is the importance of digital inclusion, because let’s be clear, 21st century economies require digital inclusion for the economic empowerment of any one and all people.  And so thinking about how we can then uplift and bring investment to the continent to work with those who are already doing the work on the continent, to increase digital inclusion. 
 
I highlighted, in particular, also what we must do to specifically address the economic empowerment of women, understanding as it — (applause) — but just understanding a universal truth, which is: You — you increase the economic capacity of women, and families benefit, communities benefit.  All of society benefits when we do that.  (Applause.)
 
And it was about also, again, in my role as Vice President, being there to uplift the importance of good governance and democracy.  And so I had bilateral meetings, which are just one-on-one meetings, with the three presidents of the three countries.  And among the topics that I raised and we discussed is the importance of good governance and democracy.
 
So raising that it is important, when we’re looking at, in particular, private investment and U.S. private investment on the continent, that there’s going to be certain priorities that include — we’re going to want to know that there’s freedom of the press, that rule of law, human rights — that these will be issues for Americans in terms of shareholders or consumers, to know that we are engaged in a way that there are certain shared priorities in terms of those goals.
 
So these were the — the areas of focus for the trip, as captured in the second day that we were there with the speech that I gave at Black Star Monument.
 
MS. NABONGO:  Thank you so much.
 
MR. YOUNG:  We’ll be sharing the mic.  Old school.  (Laughter.)
 
I really want to ask you a bit about the Ghana portion of the trip.  We’re in this museum of history and remembrance, a place from the beginning that was committed to the unvarnished truth.  And I know you visited Cape Coast Castle in Ghana.  And you said some powerful words, which are not only about pain but survival. 
 
I was watching it today, and it said, quote, “History must be learned, and we must then be guided by what we know also to be the history of those who survived in the Americas and in the Caribbean.” 
 
Can you tell us about your experience at the “Door of No Return” and what that meant to you?
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  You know, in many ways, I’m still processing it.  It’s one thing to read about it and learn history as most of us have since the day we were born, and then to be at that site, which is one, sadly, of many such sites. 
 
And, you know, the — the tour guide — I don’t want to call him a tour guide; he was a historian — taking us through the various dungeons — right? — the section for men, the section for women, the section for the troublemakers, where pregnant women were kept because they had been raped.  The details of the fact that women were being raped by their captors and then the baby taken away on the day she gave birth so she could be sold — the mother.  And then if the baby lived, would be put to work in that very place. 
 
It’s — it’s like — this monument to all that we are discussing today.  There is something about being in a physical space that if you have learned about what it represents, you feel what it represents.  And that’s how it felt.  It was — it’s a place of horror.  It’s a place of horror. 
 
Because let’s remember, first of all, people were kidnapped from their homes and taken for miles, hundreds of miles, to this place.  They didn’t know where they were headed.  Untold numbers died on that voyage, then to be put in dungeons, where there’s a hole toward the ceiling where the light could come, but also depending on whether it was — there was a pathway behind it is where the guards would watch.  And from time to time, they might give water.  And the water was so — there was — it was so little that he described about how these people who had been kidnapped — these victims of a horrible crime — would try to survive, including drinking the water off of somebody else’s hair.
 
And you — you see this place, and it’s — it’s — it’s horrendous.  It’s horrendous. 
 
And so, after — you know, we had press with us on the trip.  And after they had — they — I spoke to the press, and I had some prepared comments.  And I looked down at the prepared comments and I was like, “No, I’m not doing that.”  And I just said what I felt.  (Applause.)
 
And — and it was about — yes.  Right?  In the midst of so-called leaders who are trying to erase history in our country — (applause) — what we must all do to stand up and speak out about this as loud as we can.  It’s not just about “forget”; they’re trying to erase history.
 
Let’s understand what this means.  And there are historical precedents for this kind of approach and what it means and what could come next.  So there was that piece of it, in terms of my comments that day.  There was also the piece of it that — that I spoke of that was about: We are not going to be defeated.  And we weren’t defeated.
 
And out of that incredible pain and those crimes, the survivors and the descendants, carrying traditions and culture and faith and a memory of family, endured generation after generation.  And in this country included the freedom fighters who fought for civil rights.  And all of those who benefited across the board, whether their ancestors were at that slave — I don’t even like calling it a castle, by the way.
 
MR. YOUNG:  Right.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  And what we should do then to also celebrate the strength of our people to come through that and go on to be astronauts. 
 
I just spoke yesterday with Astronaut Glover.  Do you guys know who he is?  (Laughs.)  (Applause.)  He’s about to go on the Artemis II mission to circle the Moon.  I just talked to him yesterday.  Right? 
 
And so, the scientists and the astronauts and the mathematicians and all of the people —
 
MS. NABONGO:  And the Vice President.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  — and the Vice President of the United States.  (Laughs.)  (Applause.)  Right.
 
And so, I felt it important at that moment there to bring up all these points: the importance of teaching history, the importance of speaking it, the importance of speaking out against those crimes against humanity, and then to also remember how we must celebrate the endurance and the — the strength of the will to survive and thrive.
 
So, there you are.  (Applause.)
 
MR. YOUNG:  Absolutely.
 
MS. NABONGO:  That was work.
 
MR. YOUNG:  All right.
 
MS. NABONGO:  So, you have been working to empower women throughout your career, and it was obviously a major focus of the trip as well.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yeah.
 
MS. NABONGO:  And you breathe rare air, you know, being a woman of power at the head of a major economy.  But you also were able to meet with the President of Tanzania —
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yes.
 
MS. NABONGO:  — who’s one of 13 female heads of state of 193 countries right now.
 
So why did you feel it important to emphasize empowerment of women?  And what was that like to meet one of so few of the female heads of state?
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  She’s the only woman on the continent to lead a country.  And before her, Ellen Johnson, who was the first and the last elected woman to lead a country on the continent.  So there is still work to be done there — and here, obviously.  (Laughs.)  (Applause.)
 
But, you know, I — I — so, I — for example, we convened these women entrepreneurs, who are just phenomenal and doing all this extraordinary work.  I’m — I’m sure there was a picture up here somewhere of that meeting.  We’re doing all this extraordinary work.
 
One — one of the women is finding ways that is about sustainable agriculture and smart agriculture to — she’s, I think, the major producer of mushrooms; she refers to herself as the “mushroom queen” — and what she is doing to do smart agriculture. 
 
There was another woman who is a physician, who created a whole approach where she then got investors to get vans to take medical — to take doctors to the villages, in particular to help with — with childbirth, because there, like here, there are unacceptable rates of maternal mortality. 
 
And she was doing the work of going — like, basically, it’s like a clinic on wheels.  And then she would stay in a village for a period of time for all the births for that moment.  And then she would train the midwives about how to deal with what can be critical moments during — during delivery and teach them techniques.
    
 There was another young woman who was doing work that is about connecting people with resources. 
    
 Anyway, it was just — it was fantastic.
     
In some of the countries, over 50 percent of farmers, which is one of the main sources of the economy — agriculture — over 50 percent were women.  In another country, over 70 percent of the farmers are women and, for the most part, do not own the land and are not in the banking system and not online.
        
 And so, a lot of the work that I did focused on women was about talking about what we need to do in terms of their economic empowerment and, as a tool toward that end, what we do around digital inclusion, giving them the ability to have technology so that they can be in the banking system, in fintech — the financial technology systems — so they’re not just having cash that somebody might take.
    
You know, dealing with — what we know is when you have economic empowerment, then you can walk away from bad situations, because you actually have resources.  And so, the connection between that and the health and wellbeing of women — connecting that with financial and economic empowerment.
     
But the reason to focus on it is, again, there are disparities there, like here.  And we have to address them because we know the data is clear, anecdotally.  We know when you address those gender disparities, everyone benefits.
     
And so, that’s why I focused on that.
     
The President of Tanzania, she and I spent a wonderful time together.  I actually hosted her at a meeting here at the White House when she was in the States.  And then we saw each other at the U.S.-Africa Summit.  And so, this was our third meeting.  It was actually the third meeting, I think, for each one of the presidents. 
    
 And she is — you know, she is working on good governance.  She is — she has succeeded — the president before her passed away.  And she came in having been in government for decades and really is — takes very seriously the importance of being a public servant and fixing systems and reforming systems.  And so, it was a really good meeting with her — President Samia.  Yeah.
    
MS. NABONGO:  Thank you.  Speaking about governance, protecting and expanding democracy is a core value for the Biden-Harris administration.  All three countries that you visited are democracies and making democratic progress.  Why did you feel it was important to meet these leaders specifically? 
     
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  So, each of these three countries is really focusing on the issue of good governance and democracy.
     
I mean, for example, Zambia — the president there came into office in — through a democratic process where young people turned out in record numbers to vote.  And he is doing a lot to address what he needs to do around good governance.  And so, each of them has a commitment to that, and I wanted to highlight that. 
     
A lot of the method to the approach for this trip and for the work going forward is about public-private partnership.  And in order for that to make sense and work for all the partners, there has to be an infrastructure that is about rule of law, that is about good governance, that is about an explicit intention to fight corruption.  Because otherwise, the economic investment that these countries want just can’t happen because it doesn’t make business sense for those who would invest. 
     
And so, talking with them about these issues and highlighting what’s happening on the continent is important.  And it’s also important because I think there are a lot of stereotypes about what’s happening on the continent and who are African leaders and how do they lead.
    
 And so, to bring whatever capacity I have to bear on highlighting the work that is happening that is about working toward democratic reforms was important.
    
MR. YOUNG:  Great.  I want to talk a little bit about that very thing: the public-private partnerships.  When I was there in Ghana, in Accra, I got to go by David Adjaye’s studio, Adjaye Associates.  And, of course, David Adjaye helped design this building.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yeah. 
     
MR. YOUNG:  So it was wonderful to see him and what they’re up to now, building hospitals across the country through all sorts of innovation, which reminded me of your speech at Black Star Plaza, where you mentioned African innovation. 
 
But you didn’t just speak about it.  Later, you announced $8 billion — that’s billion with a “B” — of private and public investments to the continent.  And you issued a call to action to the private sector.  Why is this important, these next steps?  What do you see down the road for this?
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  So — well, there’s a backstory to it, which partly is that, early in our administration, I had a focus on what was happening around the northern part of Central America — Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador — because of the irregular migration that we were seeing. 
    
And we created a public-private partnership that ended up — we ended up getting commitments of over $4.2 billion for those three countries in that region.
     
And as a result of that work — (applause) — thank you.  And so, as a result of that work, already we have 4 million people in the — in — online than — that had not been, 1 million people in the banking system that had not been. 
    
So, I knew it works — because we tried it and it worked.  So, it was always my intention: Let’s take that to the continent of Africa. 
 
So, I literally got on the phone and called a bunch of the partners there and then more, and said, “Hey, we’re going to take this approach.  We have a model that’s worked.”  Many of them knew about it if they hadn’t been a part of it.  And to a one, they said, “Count us in.”
      
So, Microsoft, HP, Cisco, MasterCard, Visa, Ford Foundation, MacArthur Foundation, Melinda Gates all said yes. 
      
And so, through this, we then got 8 bil- — pulled together $8 billion, $7 billion which is focused on climate.  So, that’s resilience, adaptation — right? — all that we need to do there.  And $1 billion on the women’s inclusion piece. 
      
And it is not only U.S. investment; African private sector leaders are a part of this.  Because let’s be clear also: There are very successful private sector leaders on the continent who have already been doing the work.  And we are partnering then — (applause) — with them on this engagement.
 
 And — and so it culminated in a convening where I had 30 of them represented at a meeting that we did the last day that we were on the continent in Lusaka.  And we had a two-hour meeting where we talked about a number of things. 
    
We talked about the importance of digital inclusion, but let’s make sure that we are making it accessible and affordable.  Let us talk about human rights and continue to make that a point of emphasis because it is critical if we are talking about equitable outcomes and making sure no one is left outside or left behind, much less suppressed. 

You know, we talked about the importance of metrics in terms of our analysis of our effectiveness.  So, for example, back on the piece about women — that it is important that we understand this is not only about inclusion of women, it’s also about leadership.  Right?
 
Because we can let every — you know, let all the women in the room — if you just want to go with a metaphor of a room — right? — who’s not in.  You can let everybody in.  But then — and other people are leading?  Like, let’s make sure that we’re also focused on women as leaders and cultivating their leadership.  Right?  (Applause.)  
 
So, these are the kinds of things that came out of that, but an $8 billion already committed to this approach.  And — and it’s very exciting, because the — the exponential benefit of that is going to be much bigger than that $8 billion.  And that’s just, so far, what we’ve gotten.  Yeah.
 
MR. YOUNG:  Thanks. 
 
MS. NABONGO:  So, I follow you on social.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Okay.  (Laughs.)
 
MS. NABONGO:  And I saw that picture: “how it started and how it’s going.”  (Laughter.) 
 
So, if you guys haven’t seen, her picture from your first visit to Zambia as a child. 
 
(Points to photo of the Vice President on projector screen.)  Yes, that’s how it started.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  That’s how it started.  (Laughs.)
 
MS. NABONGO:  How — how it’s going.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I don’t know where — how it’s going.  But that — I mean, well, here we are.
 
MS. NABONGO:  Yes, how it’s going.  (Points to photo of the Vice President on projector screen.)
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Oh, there it is.  (Laughter and applause.)
 
MS. NABONGO:  I love that.
 
So, you first visited as a child.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yeah.
 
MS. NABONGO:  What was it like to return now not only as an adult, but in an official capacity as Vice President?
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  It was, you know — the President of Zambia greeted me and said, “Welcome home.”  (Laughter and applause.)
 
And — so my grandfather, my mother’s father, was — went to Zambia — went and — he and my grandmother and my aunt, actually, lived in Lusaka because, out of solidarity with the independence movement when Zambia gained independence, my grandfather went on behalf of the Indian government to help this newly independent country get situated.  And so, they lived in Lusaka, and we went to visit them there. 
 
And, you know, my grandfather was probably one of my favorite people in the world.  He — well, first of all, because I was the eldest grandchild, so he convinced me I was his favorite.  (Laughter.)
 
But — but my grandfather — you know, those independence movements — you know, that was my connection to it in many ways in terms of a personal connection.  And he would always talk about the importance of fighting for freedom.  He would talk about the importance of an independent people. 
 
Because, of course, when we’re talking about these fights against colonization — right? — these — there was there was a through-line: the importance of the people running and the people ruling and governing for themselves, the importance of fighting against corruption.
 
And, you know — so I used to talk a lot with my grandfather from my earliest days where I think I understood a little bit of it.  And then, as I got older, I understood a lot of it. 
 
And so, to go back there and then we — we found the plot where they lived.  It’s now been — a new building is there.
 
But also, my aunt worked with — she’s an OB-GYN — and she worked at the — at the hospital down the street, delivering babies at — it was then called Lusaka Hospital-something.  It’s now changed its name.  It’s a teaching hospital now.
 
But — so I called my aunt to ask her.  And she said, “Well, you should check because one of my best friends lived down the street.  And he and I would walk to the hospital together, and we then did a bunch of stuff over their careers.”  So I asked her his name.  It turned out he ended up being the Minister of Health for Zambia later and was responsible for reform of the healthcare system.
 
So, when we went to Lusaka, my team found his daughter, and I met with her.  And it was just the most special thing.  And so, we talked.  And she’s actually writing a book about her father and his significance to the independence in present-day Zambia on the healthcare system piece of it.
 
So, there was so many pieces of that trip that were about, you know, everything from a bilateral meeting with the president to talk about security issues and democracy.  And we talked about, for example, another big issue affecting a lot African countries, which is debt and how we must address that and be aligned. 
 
And, by the way, we stand — we’ve been very clear — and the IMF and everywhere else — that there should be bilateral participation in terms of restructuring the debt issues that a lot of these countries face.  But it was everything from that to meeting the daughter of a colleague of my aunt’s and — and what that meant for, I think, she and I, in terms of just full circle — how things work out sometimes.
 
MS. NABONGO:  Thank you for sharing.
 
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Yeah.
 
MR. YOUNG:  Well, I’m struck about you talking about Zambia and your return there.  But I was also struck — coming to Ghana, just from the time I got off the plane, riding in cabs from the airport or down the street, there were billboards of you everywhere.  And there was such welcome I felt for you in your visit.  How did you experience that?  And what’s your takeaways from the trip?

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Well, I was obviously very honored and humbled about what it meant.  And it was such a wonderful trip for all the reasons we have discussed and more.
 
But here’s my takeaway.  And it’s where I started.  I am extremely excited, not just optimistic — excited about this future.  I encourage everyone to really make sure you understand — and I don’t mean any — you, you, you — but just we understand what’s happening on that continent.  It is so exciting.
 
For example, there is, right now, technology that originated on the continent that they’ve used drones and drone technology to deliver critical medical supplies in a fraction of the time it otherwise was taking.  And that technology that was created on the continent is being replicated by different countries on the continent and right here in the United States.  Technology that was created there is being used here.
 
Not to mention, if you look at the range, Afrobeats.  (Applause.)  I hope y’all have seen my Spotify lists.  (Laughs.)
 
But — because we didn’t even talk about that.  We went to a studio.  It’s called Vibrate Studio.  And these — I mean, talented, incredible — there it is.  So and — there’s Sheryl and Idris — and we were all hanging out.  And that’s the — that’s it. 
 
And then you go in, and that’s the woman who actually runs it.  And there — it’s a studio — and there — and so what she’s done is created — so it’s also a community center and it’s also a skate park.  So it’s actually — skateboarding is there too.  And she’s created this community center.
 
And obviously, so much about technology helps people — you know, they just go — you can go on YouTube and learn how to play an instrument.  So I met musicians there who were self-taught because of technology.  And they’re doing incredible work that is, of course, influencing the world in terms of not only technology and science, but also in terms of culture, in terms of entertainment, in terms of music.  It’s all happening there.
 
And so my — my feeling about the trip was: Whatever we were able to do with us all being there together, because we were all there together, to highlight — and maybe for some who didn’t know, now you know — (laughter) — what is happening on that continent and reordering and repositioning or at least thinking about the next era in this relationship.
 
And it is about a relationship that is based on the optimism and the excitement that we should all have about what is happening there, how it will affect us here, but also based on the intertwined history, based on the demographics I mentioned at the beginning — why we must think of it as an imperative to engage as partners in investing in the future of the globe and doing that by understanding the connection to that and the continent of Africa.

MR. YOUNG:  Amen.  (Applause.)

MS. NABONGO:  Amen.  I’m so inspired.

MR. YOUNG:  Did you have any last words you wanted to leave us with?

THE VICE PRESIDENT:  I just — I want to encourage us all, like I said, to just keep — I mean, the diaspora is phenomenal. 
 
One of the things that we have done, also, af- — coming out of the Africa — U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit — and we — and you hosted us here for so much of that, where I stood on this very stage with the president of Ghana for the YALI meeting that we had — the Young African Leaders Initiative.  (Applause.)  Right? 

So, let us continue to use our voices in the context of the diaspora, in — in the context of having any concerns about the — the role of the United States of America, in terms of our own, much less global, security and prosperity.  Let us have an interest in uplifting it if we have any level of excitement at all about the future and what that could look like based on what we do right now.

That’s what I would ask that we all take away from this moment and — and from our level of — of interest and exploration about all of these, in terms of the potential.  It is great, and I’m very excited. 

And so, we’re just going to keep, you know, doing this work every day.  I had a bunch of meetings today about what we’re doing by way of follow-up.  And I’m very excited about — and thank you for hosting us, again, for this conversation.

MR. YOUNG:  Thank you, Vice President.
    
THE VICE PRESIDENT:  Thank you.

MR. YOUNG:  Let’s give another round of applause.  Thank you.  (Applause.)

                            END                 5:17 P.M. EDT

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