Kamala Harris called out a specific argument on Instagram this week: that voting is a privilege rather than a right. She didn’t treat it as abstract theory. She named the students pushing back against it.
Harris amplified organizers at North Carolina A&T State University, one of the country’s most prominent HBCUs, and framed their work as a direct fight over ballot access. “They told us voting is a privilege, not a right,” she wrote on Instagram, quoting what she heard from the students themselves. She followed with a direct statement of support: “These young leaders are organizing, speaking out, and refusing to let anyone take their power – and I am so proud of them.”
That’s a lot of weight packed into a short post. Harris knows exactly what she’s doing.
The “privilege vs. right” framing has circulated in legal and political circles for years. It tends to surface in debates over voter ID laws, limits on early voting, and restrictions on absentee balloting. The framing carries real legal implications, in court cases and in legislation. Harris calling it out directly, and giving credit to the students fighting it, is a deliberate move.
North Carolina is not neutral ground for this story. It’s been one of the most contested states on voting law in the country. A federal court struck down a sweeping North Carolina voting law in 2016, calling it an effort to disenfranchise Black voters. Legal fights over voter ID and absentee ballot rules have continued since. That history adds real stakes to the organizing happening at North Carolina A&T.
North Carolina A&T, founded in 1891 in Greensboro, has a deep history of student-driven civic activism. The 1960 Woolworth’s lunch counter sit-ins started just blocks from campus, and A&T students were central to that protest. The students organizing on ballot access today are part of a long tradition on this campus.
HBCUs have often been at the center of voting rights battles. Students at these schools have faced specific obstacles at the polls – limited on-campus voting sites and inconsistent student ID acceptance rules. The students at North Carolina A&T aren’t fighting a new fight. They’re continuing one.
Harris has stayed vocal on voting rights since leaving the White House. She led the Biden administration’s push on voting access through the White House Office of Public Engagement. Federal voting rights legislation stalled in the Senate during her term. She hasn’t stepped back from the issue since.
This post doesn’t announce a new campaign or name a specific bill. It gives national attention to grassroots student organizing at an HBCU in a closely contested state. For advocacy groups monitoring ballot access, that signal matters. Harris’s platform means the North Carolina A&T students’ message reaches far beyond Greensboro.
The post lands at a charged moment. Ballot access remains a live fight across multiple states. Legislatures have moved to tighten rules, and advocacy organizations have pushed back with litigation and ground-level organizing. The students at North Carolina A&T are part of that broader effort.
Short and direct. Political messages like that tend to travel.
