John,
Hispanic Heritage Month is in full swing! From September 15 to October 15, this month is dedicated to recognizing and celebrating the Hispanic and Latinx community.
Here at Sister District, we’re incredibly proud to support five bold, progressive Latinx candidates who are ready to lead, fight for our rights, and bring meaningful representation to their communities in state chambers: Lorena Austin, Darrin Camilleri, Ricky Hurtado, Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz, and Emily Randall.
We’ll tell you more about these strong community leaders in a moment, but if you’re ready to help power their voter mobilization efforts, split a donation between their campaigns now.
Here’s a little more info about these candidates:
Lorena Austin is a 5th-generation Arizonan running for Arizona State House of Representatives District 9, where she’ll fight for public education, affordable housing, community resources, and more. She speaks from the heart and from a place of understanding of what it means to be poor, a woman of color, and queer.
In 2016, Darrin Camilleri became Michigan's youngest Latino and first-ever Maltese-American elected to the state legislature — now, he’s running for Michigan State Senate. Coming from a long line of union auto workers, he’ll continue to be steadfast in pursuing opportunity for all communities in Michigan.
As a son of working-class immigrants, Ricky Hurtado grew up in rural North Carolina and is a product of public schools. In 2020, he made history when he became the first Latino Democrat elected to the state legislature, and he’s running for re-election to keep up the fight for a more just and equal North Carolina.
Small business owner, city councilwoman, and community leader Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz is running to flip Pennsylvania’s State House District 129. Her motto is “Querer Es Poder” (when there is a will, there’s a way) and “Everything you do, do with LOVE!”
Emily Randall is a queer Chicana running for re-election for Washington State Senate. She made history in 2018 when she won a competitive election and became the first Latina elected in the 26th District. Since then, she has used her leadership to fight for her community’s needs.
These five candidates will champion progress in Arizona, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Washington — but if we’re going to elect and re-elect them in November, we need to send resources their way. Will you split a donation now?
Split a donation »
It’s crucial that we support these campaigns, so they can knock on as many doors as possible to energize voters, boost turnout, and win.
In solidarity,
— Sister District
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Pol. Adv. paid for by Sister District Project, 340 South Lemon Avenue, #8737, Walnut, CA 91789, https://sisterdistrict.com/, 909-293-9615 with 100% from out-of-state contributors. Authorized by Lorena Austin (AZ LD9-House), Darrin Camilleri (MI SD 4), Johanny Cepeda-Freytiz (PA HD 129), and Emily Randall (WA SD 26)(Democrat).
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Donations to Sister District Project, a 527 organization, are not tax deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.
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