Born in Baltimore in February of 2006 to an African American descended from Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson and a Nigerian Immigrant. The small family moved to the French Quarter in New Orleans in 2007 and Victoria would grow up there as her 4 younger siblings were born. She had a relativity happy childhood, despite how poor her family was. Her parents often had a hard time finding jobs for most of her childhood due to the 2008 recession. At the worst time they were nearly homeless and at the best, they were living in an apartment meant for 3 people. She knew, from a young age, that the only way she could get out of poverty was knowledge.
In school, she was the exceptional student, always in the most clubs, always having the highest GPA, always doing the most sports. On the outside she was always keeping it all together, never showing a crack in her mental state except to her closest friends. Meanwhile, she was breaking at the seams for all of high school. Luckily for her, she got into Yale. Majoring in Ethics, Politics, and Economics, she graduated with a BA in 2028. She then attended Oxford on the Rhodes Scholarship, getting an MPhil in Politics (Comparative) in 2030. For a while she would stay in the UK, living in London for 2 years and working for the Labour Party. Until her long-time boyfriend, a Med Student at Harvard, proposed. She moved back to the States and started work for a non-profit seeking to get business out of politics while volunteering for various local and national organizations.
In 2033, once he graduated, they moved to Atlanta from Boston.
In 2038, a progressive think-tank seeking to get into the field of getting candidates into office contacted Victoria, starting her Senate Campaign. She won the seat, stealing the last remaining safe statewide seat for Republicans in the now blue state. Once in Senate, she tried to stay in the background as much as possible. That didn't last for long as Senator Guess and Senator Randolph tended to co-sponsor legislation a lot of the time. That lead her to be seen as somewhat of a rising star of the party, something of an uniter, as even though she had a clear bias for progressivism she was far more willing to negotiate.
Once Guess left the Senate in 2043, she was left to lead the coalition Guess had crafted in Congress. At first, she was terrible at it and often had to get advice from Guess. That almost cost her reelection in 2044 at 51-49. However, once her second term started she really got a handle of leading. When it came time for the Third California Constitution to be debated upon in Congress, she was one of the biggest reasons it passed. Thinking that, "Hey, maybe one day I could be President? First Black Female doesn't sound all that bad!", she ran for Governor of Georgia in 2046 seeking executive experience she could use to her advantage in 2048 and later.
The race for the Governorship was more or less a race for the Democratic Nomination, as it was known by everyone that the Governorship was safe democratic. So, it was a race between the incumbent governor, a corporate Democrat, and Victoria, a populist Democrat. Victoria won the primary 56-44, partly because she mobilized her supporters, knowing that people tend not to vote in primaries. She went on to win the Governorship at 59-39.
She was planning on running for President in 2048, she didn't expect to win by any means. The goal was to get her name out into the nation, however after Cahill and Fischer announced their runs, she decided it was better to not embarrass herself in front of the country. The next four years past and came, she won reelection. In the early days of the 2052 election, many people hoped she would run for President. However, Guess told her he was going to run, and again Randolph decided not to run, telling Fox News she didn't know if the nation was ready for a Black Woman to rule and instead endorsed Philip Blackburn, a Speaker of a State Legislature, as to through the nation off from her future runs. Then, she was selected for the Vice Presidental nominee for the Democratic Party in an open ballot, something that hasn't happened in nearly a century. As of now, she is ready to fight for a Guess-Randolph ticket.