AS Kamala Harris heads into the November presidential race against Donald Trump, a social club she joined in college four decades ago might just pay its biggest dividends yet.
"Whatever it is that she needs our coalitions to do, we're going to be there to help push it out and get it done," said Tanya Baham, a member of Harris' college sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha, who was in attendance at the Democratic National Convention.
Sororities and fraternities abound across United States college campuses, with their Greek-letter names, exclusive memberships, and promise of community, usually along same-sex lines.
But Harris' membership in the historically black sorority provides her campaign a direct line to a network of 360,000 women across the country, many of whom are excited to see one of their own at the White House.
And the Democratic Party, which counts women and black voters as key constituencies in their electoral base, is paying attention.
While the sorority itself is non-partisan, many, like Baham, are ready to tap their networks for fundraising and voter registration in an election that could come down to the wire.
"We're going to make certain that our kiddos, the young folks, the old folks, get a chance to register and then get to the polls," said Baham, a social worker in Louisiana.
Harris joined AKA at Howard University, a historically black school in Washington where the sorority was founded in 1908, the first such organisation for black undergraduate women in the US.
Over the next few decades, more black sororities and fraternities emerged, providing African American students refuge amid the scourge of American racism and also serving as bases for civil rights organising.
AKA has chapters for undergraduate students and college graduates, making it far more than just a college-level organisation.
As vice-president, Harris has hosted black sorority and fraternity leaders at the White House, and ahead of rising to the top of the Democratic ticket, she headlined AKA's convention in Texas in July.
Later that month, within days of President Joe Biden ending his reelection bid, she was at a convention for another black sorority, Zeta Phi Beta, in Indiana.
AKA members were among those on a "Win With Black Women" Zoom call that raised US$1.5 million, and Glenda Glover, the sorority's former president, is leading outreach for Harris at the country's historically black colleges.
In a historic first, AKA has also formed a political action committee, used for fundraising for political candidates.
"We're just all ready to work and do this," Donna Miller, a county official in Illinois who was on the Zoom call, told the Chicago Sun-Times.
"It invigorated so many people from young and old, across generations, across ethnicity."
But while AKA and other black sororities provide a network for Harris to tap into, it is hard to gauge how much that will translate into votes come November.
The sorority and its members have generally been tight-lipped; multiple members declined to speak with AFP about the election.
But Hopkins cautioned that "there are only so many voters in the US in general who attend four-year colleges and, who are members of these organisations".
And while African Americans are overwhelmingly Democratic voters, they have been peeling off from the party in recent years — a decline that has mostly come from younger and infrequent voters, according to research by Daniel Hopkins, a political scientist at the University of Pennsylvania.
At the same time, Amanda Wilkerson, an assistant professor of higher education at the University of Central Florida who has studied black voters, said organisations like black sororities and fraternities are "hidden apparatuses", often ignored by polling or the media even as they've organised for previous elections, both nationally and locally.
Their members and alumni are well-versed in campaigning, she said, and the 2024 election isn't their first go-around.
Harris "is the first candidate of her kind to be able to leverage those networks of support", Wilkerson said. "But it's not altogether new."
The writer is from AFP
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect those of the New Straits Times