Immigrant voices make democracy stronger | Sayu Bhojwani

86,495 views ・ 2016-10-25

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00:12
Good evening.
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My journey to this stage
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began when I came to America
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at the age of 17.
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You see, I'm one of the 84 million Americans
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who are immigrants
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or children of immigrants.
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Each of us has a dream when we come here,
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a dream that usually has to be rewritten
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and always has to be repurposed.
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I was one of the lucky ones.
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My revised dream led me to the work I do today:
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training immigrants to run for public office
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and leading a movement for inclusive democracy.
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But I don't want you to think it was a cakewalk,
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that America opened its arms wide and welcomed me.
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It's still not doing that.
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And I've learned a few lessons along the way
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that I wanted to share with you,
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because I think that together
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we can make American democracy
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better and stronger.
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I was born in India,
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the world's largest democracy,
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and when I was four,
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my family moved to Belize,
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the world's smallest democracy perhaps.
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And at the age of 17,
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I moved to the United States,
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the world's greatest democracy.
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I came because I wanted to study English literature.
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You see, as a child, I buried my nose in books,
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and I thought, why not make a living doing that as an adult?
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But after I graduated from college
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and got a graduate degree,
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I found myself moving from one less ideal job to another.
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Maybe it was the optimism that I had about America
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that made me take a while to understand
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that things were not going to change.
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The door that I thought was open
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was actually just slightly ajar --
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this door of America
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that would open wide if you had the right name,
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the right skin color,
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the right networks,
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but could just slam in your face
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if you had the wrong religion,
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the wrong immigration status,
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the wrong skin color.
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And I just couldn't accept that.
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So I started a career as a social entrepreneur,
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starting an organization for young people like myself --
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I was young at the time that I started it --
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who traced their heritage to the Indian subcontinent.
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In that work, I became and advocate for South Asians and other immigrants.
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I lobbied members of Congress on policy issues.
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I volunteered on election day to do exit polling.
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But I couldn't vote, and I couldn't run for office.
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So in 2000, when it was announced
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that the citizenship application fee was going to more than double
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from 95 dollars to 225 dollars,
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I decided it was time to apply before I could no longer afford it.
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I filled out a long application,
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answering questions about my current and my past affiliations.
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And once the application was submitted,
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there were fingerprints to be taken,
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a test to study for,
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endless hours of waiting in line.
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You might call it extreme vetting.
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And then in December of 2000,
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I joined hundreds of other immigrants
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in a hall in Brooklyn
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where we pledged our loyalty
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to a country that we had long considered home.
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My journey from international student to American citizen took 16 years,
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a short timeline when you compare it to other immigrant stories.
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And soon after I had taken that formal step
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to becoming an American,
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the attacks of September 11, 2001,
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changed the immigration landscape for decades to come.
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My city, New York City,
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was reeling and healing,
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and in the midst of it,
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we were in an election cycle.
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Two things happened
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as we coped with loss and recovery in New York City.
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Voters elected Michael Bloomberg mayor of New York City.
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We also adopted by ballot referendum
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the Office of Immigrant Affairs for the City of New York.
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Five months after that election,
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the newly elected mayor
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appointed me the first Commissioner of Immigrant Affairs
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for this newly established office.
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I want you to come back to that time.
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I was a young immigrant woman from Belize.
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I had basically floundered in various jobs in America
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before I started a community-based organization
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in a church basement in Queens.
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The attacks of September 11 sent shock waves through my community.
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People who were members of my family, young people I had worked with,
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were experiencing harassment
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at schools, at workplaces and in airports.
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And now I was going to represent their concerns
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in government.
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No job felt more perfect for me.
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And here are two things I learned when I became Commissioner.
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First, well-meaning New Yorkers
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who were in city government holding government positions
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had no idea how scared immigrants were
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of law enforcement.
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Most of us don't really know the difference, do we,
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between a sheriff and local police and the FBI.
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And most of us, when we see someone in uniform
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going through our neighborhoods
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feel curiosity, if not concern.
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So if you're an undocumented parent,
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every day when you say goodbye to your child,
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send them off to school and go to work,
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you don't know what the chances are
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that you're going to see them at the end of the day.
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Because a raid at your workplace,
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a chance encounter with local police
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could change the course of your life forever.
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The second thing I learned is that when people like me,
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who understood that fear,
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who had learned a new language, who had navigated new systems,
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when people like us were sitting at the table,
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we advocated for our communities' needs in a way that no one else could or would.
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I understood what that feeling of fear was like.
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People in my family were experiencing it.
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Young people I had worked with were being harassed,
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not just by classmates,
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but also by their teachers.
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My husband, then boyfriend,
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thought twice before he put a backpack on or grew a beard
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because he traveled so much.
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What I learned in 2001 was that my vote mattered
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but that my voice and vantage point also mattered.
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And it's these three things --
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immigrants' votes, voices and vantage points --
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that I think can help make our democracy stronger.
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We actually have the power
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to change the outcome of elections,
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to introduce new issues into the policy debate
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and to change the face of the pale, male, stale leadership
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that we have in our country today.
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So how do we do that?
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Well, let's talk first about votes.
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It will come as no surprise to you
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that the majority of voters in America are white.
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But it might surprise you to know
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that one in three voters are black, Latino or Asian.
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But here's the thing:
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it doesn't just matter who can vote, it matters who does vote.
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So in 2012, half of the Latino and Asian-American voters
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did not vote.
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And these votes matter not just in presidential elections.
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They matter in local and state elections.
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In 2015, Lan Diep,
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the eldest son of political refugees from Vietnam,
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ran for a seat in the San Jose City Council.
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He lost that election by 13 votes.
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This year, he dusted off those campaign shoes
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and went back to run for that seat,
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and this time he won, by 12 votes.
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Every one of our votes matters.
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And when people like Lan are sitting at the policy table,
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they can make a difference.
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We need those voices.
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We need those voices
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in part because American leadership
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does not look like America's residents.
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There are over 500,000 local and state offices in America.
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Fewer than 2 percent of those offices are held by Asian-Americans or Latinos,
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the two largest immigrant groups in our country.
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In the city of Yakima, Washington,
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where 49 percent of the population is Latino,
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there has never been a Latino on the city council until this year.
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Three newly elected Latinas joined the Yakima City Council in 2016.
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One of them is Carmen Méndez.
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She is a first-generation college student.
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She grew up partly in Colima, Mexico,
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and partly in Yakima, Washington.
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She's a single mother, a community advocate.
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Her voice on the Yakima City Council
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is advocating on behalf of the Latino community
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and of all Yakima residents.
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And she's a role model for her daughter
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and other Latinas.
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But the third most untapped resource in American democracy
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is the vantage point that immigrants bring.
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We have fought to be here.
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We have come for economic and educational opportunity.
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We have come for political and religious freedom.
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We have come in the pursuit of love.
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That dedication,
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that commitment to America
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we also bring to public service.
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People like Athena Salman,
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who just last week won the primary
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for a seat in the Arizona State House.
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Athena's father grew up in the West Bank
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and moved to Chicago,
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where he met her mother.
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Her mother is part Italian,
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part Mexican and part German.
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Together they moved to Arizona and built a life.
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Athena, when she gets to the statehouse,
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is going to fight for things like education funding
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that will help give families like hers a leg up
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so they can achieve the financial stability
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that we all are looking for.
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Immigrants' votes, voices and vantage points
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are what we all need to work to include in American democracy.
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It's not just my work. It's also yours.
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And it's not going to be easy.
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We never know
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what putting a new factor into an equation will do.
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And it's a little scary.
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You're scared that I'm going to take away your place at the table,
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and I'm scared that I'm never going to get a place at the table.
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And we're all scared
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that we're going to lose this country that we know and love.
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I'm scared you're going to take it away from me,
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and you're scared I'm going to take it away from you.
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Look, it's been a rough election year,
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a reminder that people with my immigration history
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could be removed at the whim of a leader.
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But I have fought to be in this country
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and I continue to do so every day.
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So my optimism never wavers,
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because I know that there are millions of immigrants just like me,
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in front of me, behind me and all around me.
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It's our country, too.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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