Los Angeles Times
By Kate Linthicum
October 16, 2015
Lorella
Praeli has one of the most important jobs on Hillary Rodham Clinton’s
presidential campaign — even though she’s never voted in an election.
As
Latino outreach director, Praeli spends her days at Clinton’s
headquarters in Brooklyn poring over polling data, winning endorsements
from Latino leaders and fine-tuning
the campaign’s messages to reach the nation’s fastest-growing bloc of
voters.
A
Peruvian immigrant who lived in the U.S. without legal status until
three years ago, when she obtained a green card through marriage, Praeli
hopes to obtain citizenship
in time to vote in the election that she is helping shape.
That
the campaign hired her speaks to the growing influence of the immigrant
youth movement she helped lead as well as the distinct demographics of
Latino voters.
The
median age of Latinos in the U.S. is 27 — just like Praeli — and most
Latino voters are either foreign born or the children of immigrants. To
win over Latinos for
Clinton in key states such as Florida, Colorado and Nevada, Praeli will
have to connect with people much like herself.
But
doing that is a monumental task. Twice as many Latinos will be eligible
to vote next year as in 2000, but Latinos tend to turn out at lower
rates than other groups,
in part because many young Latinos aren’t engaged in politics.
“We have to give people a reason to vote,” Praeli says.
For
Praeli, who came to the U.S. as a child to seek medical treatment, and
whose mother still lives without legal status, the race is personal. She
took the job in June
shortly after Clinton pledged to do more than President Obama to shield
immigrants from deportation.
Praeli,
who previously worked at United We Dream, one of the nation’s largest
immigrant youth groups, played a crucial role in helping to convince
Obama to expand his
deportation protection program to include the parents of citizens and
legal permanent residents. On the day he announced the expansion at a
celebratory rally at a Las Vegas high school auditorium, Praeli stood in
the front row, crying and clutching her mother,
Chela.
A
maid in New Milford, Conn., Chela would have qualified for the program.
With it, she likely could have traveled to Peru for the first time in
nearly 20 years to see
her ill father. But that’s all on hold after the administration’s
effort to limit deportations was blocked in court by Republican
opponents who argue it exceeds Obama’s power.
“To
all of a sudden have that pulled out from under you overnight, it makes
you angry,” Praeli said in a recent interview, her fists clenched. The
experience, she said,
convinced her to leave advocacy to help elect a Democrat, a sentiment
that has grown stronger in recent months, as Republican front-runner
Donald Trump has called for dramatic measures to reduce illegal
immigration.
“It’s not enough to sit on the sidelines,” she said.
Not
all her former colleagues agree with that approach. Some activists
complain Democrats have sought to co-opt the immigrant rights movement,
and many have come to distrust
promises from politicians. Obama, angling for Latino votes in 2008,
pledged to pass immigration reform in his first year, but lost his
chance by waiting to make a serious push until his second term. By then,
Republicans controlled Congress and blocked efforts
to rewrite immigration laws.
At a going away party for Praeli in Washington this summer, some colleagues ribbed her for joining forces with a politician.
“Good luck,” said the group's managing director, Cristina Jimenez. “We’ll see you on the battlefield.”
When
Praeli isn't on the road wooing Latino leaders for Clinton, she works
at the campaign’s bustling headquarters in downtown Brooklyn. On a
recent morning, as actors
Lena Dunham and Amy Schumer roamed the halls after shooting a video
with Clinton, Praeli and her team were huddled behind laptops in a
meeting room, strategizing about how to best highlight the contrasts
between Trump and Clinton.
“I
wonder if there’s an opportunity here for an op-ed from Hillary, maybe
in English and in Spanish, saying it's time to recognize the
contributions of Hispanic Americans,”
Praeli suggested. A staffer promised to check. Another vowed to step up
the frequency of the campaign’s anti-Trump tweets.
Praeli
has been a fighter since her childhood in Ica, Peru. She was 2 years
old when a drunk driver hit another car and then slammed into her on the
street, pinning her
small body against a wall. Shortly after, doctors amputated her right
leg just above the knee.
As
she was learning to walk with a prosthetic leg, she often fell. Her
father, who was involved in local politics, forbade anyone from helping
her up, insisting she learn
how to do it on her own. On hard days, he would sing to her in Spanish:
“If you get up, you’ll fall. If you fall, you’ll get up again.”
That
message — that there will be bumps in the road, but you will survive
them — helped when the family moved without legal authorization to
small-town Connecticut when
Praeli was 10. An aunt lived there, and Praeli would have access to
better medical treatment.
Her
mother, trained as a psychologist in Peru, found work cleaning houses
and looking after other people’s children. Her father returned to Peru a
few years later, unable
to get the hang of American life. (He and Praeli video chat frequently;
last year, she called him from aboard Air Force One.)
In
New Milford, where Praeli and her younger sister were the only Latinos
at their elementary school, bullies took notice of Praeli’s prosthetic
leg and glossy black hair
and taunted her with slurs like “peg leg” and “border hopper.”
She
stood up to them — printing out copies of their online jeers and
delivering them to school police — and took revenge by excelling in the
classroom. She attended Quinnipiac
University on a full scholarship. But even as she embarked on academic
studies of how municipal policies affect immigrants in the country
illegally, she kept her own status a secret.
That
changed in 2010, as hopes dimmed for a bill that would have created a
path to citizenship for some young immigrants who came to the U.S. as
children, known as Dreamers.
Praeli contacted a leader of the Dreamer movement and a few weeks later
was on her way to a meeting in Kentucky with hundreds of other young
people in the country illegally.
That
16-hour van ride was life-changing, she said. Everybody seemed happy,
and no one was scared. “It’s because they were building a movement,” she
said.
The
activists, borrowing from the gay rights struggle, talked about the
importance of “coming out” — publicly disclosing their lack of legal
status. “We wanted to create
a moral dilemma in the country so when people say 'undocumented,' they
know who they’re talking about," Praeli said.
A
few weeks after the Kentucky meeting, she had her own coming out moment
at a news conference in New Haven, Conn. “For years I learned to be
quiet and to live in the
shadows and hide,” she told reporters. “I can no longer just sit and
wait for something to happen.”
Praeli
co-founded a nonprofit group, Connecticut Students for a Dream, and
helped win passage of legislation that grants in-state tuition to
university students in the
country illegally. After she graduated, she married her U.S.-citizen
boyfriend, Tim Eakins, and moved to Washington to push for an
immigration overhaul.
Now
Praeli is trying to bring to the Clinton campaign the savvy messaging
and grass-roots organizing that made the Dreamers among the most
successful civil rights activists
of recent times.
Last
month, Praeli went home to Connecticut to visit her mother and be
fitted for a new prosthesis. She pointedly asked her doctor for a
version that does not resemble
a leg. “I have nothing to hide,” she said.
One
night, while snacking on Peruvian cookies on the back deck of her
aunt’s house, Praeli’s relatives clamored for updates on the deportation
deferral program.
“What happens when Obama leaves?” asked her aunt, Mirtha Angulo, who is a U.S. citizen.
“Even
if the program is implemented, the next president could come in and
say, 'I’m going to end it,’” Praeli said. Which is why it’s important to
elect Clinton, she continued.
“You want a president who is going to fight for it.”
Angulo took that in and nodded. Praeli had won another Latino voter.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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