Howard University hoped to make history. Now it’s ready for a different role.

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After a presidential election campaign that often brought racial issues to the surface, what was the mood at Howard University after Vice President Kamala Harris – one of its most famous alumna – gave her concession speech here?

Perhaps not surprisingly at one of the most prestigious universities in the United States, a postelection reckoning has started with considering this moment in history.

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Kamala Harris hoped to declare victory at Howard University on election night. That didn’t happen. So many students at one of America’s top Black universities are turning to the question: “Where do we go from here?”

Exit polls show that Donald Trump made some inroads into the Black vote in 2024, but here, disappointment found voice in frustration and disbelief. It also led to a renewed conviction.

“To have her lose in front of you … is devastating. So there’s somberness, but I think there’s also a resilience and a renewed fight … beyond the ballot,” says student Alex Blocker. “For a lot of people, we’re trying to figure out: Where do we go from here?”

One alum spoke of a “heaviness” as results came in. But Walter Plummer, who manages the facilities for the campus’ dorms, spoke of the need for restoration. “We’ve got a lot of issues inside our own country that we need to fix,” he says. “Families, communities, homelessness, damage from the storms. We need to help our own people.”

Kamala Harris’ visit to Howard University had the makings of a celebration.

The presidential candidate had come to her alma mater the night of the election, hoping to share a moment of history. There are few places that carry the name mecca, but this campus, as perhaps the most recognizable Black university in the United States, wears it well.

Then the results came, and what had seemed a homecoming became a homegoing of sorts. Yet the shift underlined Howard’s importance for other reasons. After a campaign that often brought racial issues to the surface, how did this American mecca feel?

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Kamala Harris hoped to declare victory at Howard University on election night. That didn’t happen. So many students at one of America’s top Black universities are turning to the question: “Where do we go from here?”

Disappointment found voice in frustration and disbelief but also a renewed conviction.

Cameron Pugh /The Christian Science Monitor

Student Alex Blocker poses outside of The Yard at Howard University on Nov. 8, 2024. “For a lot of people, we’re trying to figure out: Where do we go from here?” he says.

“To be on Howard’s campus is in many ways, I think, a testament to the good in America, and to see one of your own come through, you feel like she has your best interests in mind,” says Alex Blocker, standing outside of The Yard, flanked by grand brick buildings and a towering American flag, as workers disassemble the setup the vice president used.

“Then to have her lose in front of you, right – it is devastating,” he says. “So there’s somberness, but I think there’s also a resilience and a renewed fight … beyond the ballot. For a lot of people, we’re trying to figure out: Where do we go from here?”

Perhaps not surprisingly at one of the nation’s most prestigious universities, that reckoning has started with considering this moment in history. Some still struggle with the history that didn’t happen here on election night, particularly given the juxtaposition of the candidates.

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