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Ammar
Campa-Najjar, a Latino-Arab American Running for US Congress:
Coming to an Atlanta Event, on October 6, 2019
September 15, 2019
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Please join I-PAC GA (Independent Political Action
Committee) for a meet and greet, and a fundraiser in support
of Ammar Campa-Najjar, Congressional candidate for
California's 50th district.
Ammar hopes to become
the first Latino Arab-American member of Congress. He is
running for Congress against Republican incumbent Duncan
Hunter who was indicted for corruption. Ammar needs our
support to flip his district Blue, and we need him to be our
voice in Congress!!
What: Fundraiser in
Support of Ammar Campa-Najjar
When: October 6,
2019
Time: 12:00 pm -
3:00 pm
Where: Planet Hookah
Cafe
3350 Chamblee Tucker Road
Atlanta, GA 30341
For Tickets: Clich Here:
Contact: 678-308-1382
For further information, please click here:
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Ammar Campa-Najjar,
a Latino Arab-American Running for US Congress, is coming to an
Atlanta event on October 6, 2019.
https://www.campacampaign.com/
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A Letter to California's 50th District
My name is Ammar, the people’s candidate. I was
born
in East County, the son of a Christian working-class
mother who raised me with help from family and neighbors. From
my first job as a church janitor to serving in the White House;
I’ve devoted my life to service.
I’m running to give back to my mother’s generation, and to all
those seeking to live and retire with dignity. As a business
owner, I know the burdens we face. As a Labor Department
official, I served working families. Being your congressman
isn’t about my personal politics —
it’s about your personal health, safety, and economic dignity.
While career politicians put their own interest ahead of ours
and use special interest contributions and tax dollars to
finance lavish lifestyles,
I’ll
never forget where I come from. I’ll fight for real
ethics and campaign finance reform – and
I won’t take a dime of corporate PAC money.
We all have a role to play in restoring America’s core values:
responsibility from all; opportunity for all. That’s why in
Washington,
I worked with Republicans and Democrats to advance
critical programs, including apprenticeship jobs that pay double
the average American’s income.
So while extremists in Washington vote to take healthcare away
from us, undermine Social Security and Medicare, and attack
women’s rights,
I’ll
stand up for our families and work with members of both
parties for common sense solutions.
I’m ready to be your
independent voice in Washington, if you’ll be my voice
this election.
***
Meet Ammar Campa-Najjar
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Ammar’s
exposure to the economic needs of both businesses and workers informs
his policy views and makes job creation and economic growth among his
top policy priorities.
He is a staunch advocate for unions, for federal investment in
apprenticeship jobs and for programs for small businesses owned by
minorities, women, immigrants and veterans.
Ammar’s experience in Gaza, where he witnessed war and poverty,
emboldened him to become a strong supporter of peace and economic
justice. His platform also includes reform to the Affordable Care Act
(ACA), passing a clean Dream Act, investing in renewable energy, and
overturning Citizens United.
Ammar owns ACN Strategies, a small business that helps other small
businesses, and nonprofits with small budgets, compete against their
larger counterparts. He is also a course lecturer at SDSU, paid guest
lecturer at UCSD and Academic Civic Engagement Fellow at UCSD.
His full
focus now is earning the trust of the voters of District 50.
In running
for Congress, Ammar is answering the call to service issued in the
president's Farewell Address: “to believe you can make a
difference; to hitch your wagon to something bigger than yourselves.
This generation coming up – unselfish, altruistic, creative, patriotic…
You believe in a fair, just, inclusive America… you are willing to carry
this hard work of democracy forward…I am asking you to believe. Not in
my ability to bring about change – but in yours.”
Ammar
believes, and invites you to join his people-powered movement.
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With supporters in Borrego Springs
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Ammar, his mother and brother
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The son of a
catholic, working-class mother, Ammar was born and raised in San
Diego. The family struggled, and Ammar sought work as a
janitor in a church, where he later became a youth leader.
He
attended a community college and graduated from San Diego State
University, after taking time off to help reelect President
Obama. |
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He then worked at the
United States Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (USHCC) as
Communications and Marketing Director, promoting the economic
growth of more than 4 million Hispanic-owned small businesses.
While serving
at the USHCC, Ammar supported efforts to help small
businesses secure federal contracts as well as
procurement opportunities with larger companies seeking to
diversify their supply chains with minority-owned firms who
reflect the communities they serve. |
With Julián Castro at the US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce
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In
2012, Ammar served as Deputy Regional Field Director for the
president's reelection campaign, where he helped
oversee Southern California’s grassroots operations from a
headquarters in San Diego. Ammar worked alongside thousands of
people, who in the spirit of public service, volunteered their
labor and love in advocacy of a common cause.
Following the election, Ammar secured a White House position in
the Executive Office of the President. When he was
unable to afford the move to Washington, DC, he secured a loan
to serve on the team that selected the 10 letters that the
president read every night. Ammar read thousands of letters from
citizens, learning much about the hopes, fears and daily
struggles of the American people. |
Ammar serving at The White House
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At the U.S. Department of
Labor, Ammar led the Office of Public Affairs for the Employment
and Training Administration (ETA). In this role, Ammar
was instrumental in promoting a nationwide effort to double and
diversify the number of Registered Apprenticeships in America,
an "earn while you learn job" that pays workers an
average of $70,000 a year. Ammar also supported: the Trade
Adjustment Assistance Program (TAA) in helping American workers
who were laid off due to unfair trade deals; expanding aid for
farm workers; launching youth summer jobs programs; advancing
veteran employment opportunities; providing vocational training
and rehabilitation services to those in the criminal justice
system; improving reemployment services; and cracking down on
unemployment fraud. |
Swearing in at Department of Labor |
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https://www.campacampaign.com/
***
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