Political science research has long demonstrated a relationship between anger and political participation, a relationship that is likely to significantly vary across intersectional groups. While anger has increased overall, Black men and women have generally reported lower levels of anger and a weaker relationship between anger and electoral participation than white men and women. However, because of variations in both historical and contemporary access to political voice, as well as legacies of state violence, we expect not only race but also gender to moderate the relationship between anger and both electoral and non-electoral participation. Taking an intersectional approach across two nationally representative surveys, we demonstrate that both race and gender impact the association between anger and electoral as well as non-electoral engagement. We do find that race explains men’s differences in political participation. However, when looking among white and Black women, we find that white women engage in non-electoral participation and Black women engage in electoral participation at higher rates than previous work would predict. In 2020, Black women, along with both white men and women, when angry, were mobilized to participate electorally. Further, while Black women were mobilized by anger to protest in 2020 and 2022 and Black men were mobilized to sign petitions and post online in 2022, anger motivated white women’s non-electoral engagement in both 2020 and 2022. This research informs our understanding of the circumstances through which anger is mobilizing, highlighting, in particular, the breadth of avenues to political engagement taken by white and Black women.