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Stop. *Record scratch. Freeze frame.*
You may be wondering how this girl:
IMAGE: Elissa Slotkin as a toddler
Ended up here:
IMAGE: Elissa serving her first tour in Iraq as a CIA analyst
Serving my first of three tours in Iraq as a CIA analyst in Iraq, working to understand terrorist and militia groups that were targeting US forces and Iraqi civilians and plotting against the U.S.
It started on 9/11. One of the big moments that changed my life.
I was 24 years old, and I happened to be in New York City on my second day of grad school. By the time the dust had settled, I knew that I wanted to go into national security and protect my country.
Several months later, the CIA came to campus and my favorite professor encouraged me to hear what they had to say. Not wanting to disappoint him, I went. I applied, got the job, and after a lengthy background check, I started in Langley as an analyst.
It wasn’t long before I found myself in Iraq, my first of three deployments.
Going from the national security world to politics was a major culture shock. For 16 years, I didn’t talk publicly about my work—when I posted on Facebook that I was thinking about running for Congress, people asked me if I’d been hacked. One thing I definitely hadn’t done was ask people for money.
To be upfront: Winning this race is going to take a lot of resources. A crazy amount. When you're running to win a seat in a swing state like Michigan, you can't take anything for granted.
And we have a critical FEC fundraising deadline coming up in just a few days I need your help with.
If keeping Michigan's Senate seat blue this November feels worth $ASK to you, that's the donation I am asking you to make to my campaign today. Do it before our FEC fundraising deadline ends and we're legally required to report how much we've raised.
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Thank you,
Elissa
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