Page has dedicated her adult life to fighting for progressive change in the South. After college, Page moved to Atlanta, Georgia where she worked for over 20 years to build a more progressive Democratic Party of Georgia at all levels.
Starting out as a Young Democrat, Page grew the Young Democrats of Atlanta chapter from only four members when she took over to the largest chapter in the state with well over 100 members. Following this, Page served as the Executive Director of the Young Democrats of Georgia where she was able to strengthen the organization and increase its focus on training and support of young Democratic leaders. She served as Executive Director of the Fulton County Democratic Party (Georgia version of DPEC) for five years and became the first woman Executive Director of the Democratic Party of Georgia. Under her leadership, the party codified issue and constituency caucuses into its structure including a Women’s Caucus, an LGBTQ+ Caucus, a Disability Caucus, a Veterans Caucus, and a Progressive Caucus. She also began to deepen the party’s commitment to grassroots mobilization and candidate recruitment and development. These changes are still in effect today and the party is flourishing under the progressive leadership provided by their Chair, Congresswoman Nikema Williams.
Page was the youngest person to the DNC from Georgia and served on the DNC for four years. She was a Super Delegate to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. Page was one of the architects of the progressive transformation taking place in Georgia that led to Georgia going for Biden in 2024 and electing both Reverend Warnock and John Ossoff to the US Senate.
Page was the founding Director of Georgia’s c3 civic engagement table called ProGeorgia and Georgia’s c4 civic engagement table now called America Votes Georgia. Through this work, she helped usher in a new era of coordination among over 30 progressive civic engagement organizations focused on building power, engaging, and turning out the vote of BIPOC voters across the state. Through the tables, organizations have been able to strengthen, deepen, and expand their programs to build trust and relationships with voters and to transform voters’ understanding of their own power and the importance of expressing this power through voting and civic action.
She worked alongside such leaders as Stacey Abrams, Congressman John Lewis, Congresswoman Nikema Williams, Tamieka Atkins, LaTosha Brown, Helen Butler, Malika Redmond, and many others to lay a path for real progressive change in Georgia and in our country.
Page fell in love with New Orleans on her first visit here in 1994 and spent as much time here as she could. She split her time between New Orleans and Atlanta from 2010 and 2017. In 2017, she was finally able to call New Orleans her permanent home and is excited to bring her experience in laying the foundation for progressive change to both the Louisiana Democratic Party and the state of Louisiana.
Page currently works in philanthropy, providing grants to strengthen state-level c3 civic engagement infrastructure to build power, engage voters, and turn out the vote in BIPOC communities, fight voter suppression, and protect the right to vote in 15 states (including Louisiana) in three regions across the country: the South, the Southwest, and the Great Lakes.
Page and President Biden share the same alma mater, the University of Delaware, where she earned a BA in English Literature with minors in Political Science and Religious Studies. Page did her graduate work at Georgia State University in Educational Policy Studies and earned a Certificate in Hospitality Administration with a concentration in Foodservice Management from Cornell University.