Lydia Edwards endorsed by community activists
Monique Nguyen, Matahari Women Workers’ Center; Lenita
Reason, Brazilian Worker Center; and Gladys Vega, La Colaborativa
BOSTON – In the special election to the State Senate, Lydia
Edwards has been endorsed by: Monique Nguyen, Executive Director of the
Matahari Women Workers’ Center; Lenita Reason, Workers' Rights Executive
Director, Brazilian Worker Center; and Gladys Vega, Executive Director,
La Colaborativa. Primary Election Day is December 14, 2021. General Election
Day is January 11, 2022.
“Lydia and I worked hand-in-hand to secure the Massachusetts
Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, and that was only the beginning of our
advocacy work together,” said Monique Nguyen. “Over the decade of
knowing Lydia, she has consistently stood up for and help empower the people
who need it: exploited workers, immigrant families fighting deportation, people
facing displacement from their homes, and countless others. Lydia will be a
visionary and effective champion in the Senate and I’m proud to endorse her
candidacy.”
Of Lydia, Lenita Reason said: “Long before she was
elected to office, Lydia was honored by the Brazilian Worker Center as a
Community Peacemaker for her work helping domestic workers secure job stability
and fair benefits. That’s the difference with Lydia: She shows up and does the
work, not for headlines or her own benefit. She helps people because that’s
what drives her, and I know she’ll have an even greater population to lift up
when she is elected to the state senate.”
“Lydia Edwards has been a fearless advocate for people who
need affordable housing, for homeowners who are struggling to make ends meet,
and as she made important changes to the zoning code,” said Vega. “In
her role as a Boston City Councilor, I worked closely with Lydia on issues of
climate change and environmental justice. She is the person who has what it
takes to make strong policy for Massachusetts.”
Prior to entering the City Council, Councilor Edwards worked
extensively in the legal field serving as a judicial law clerk with the
Massachusetts Superior Court and the Massachusetts Appeals Court. Edwards
worked as a public interest attorney with Greater Boston Legal Services
focusing on labor issues such as fighting for access to unemployment insurance,
back wages, fair treatment for domestic workers and combating human
trafficking. She served as the statewide campaign coordinator for the
Massachusetts Coalition for Domestic Workers, which advocated for the passage
of the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights. In 2015, she was named
Bostonian of the Year by the Boston Globe.
Lydia Edwards is a candidate for State Senate representing
the First Suffolk and Middlesex District, following the departure of Senator
Joseph A. Boncore. For a full and up-to-date list of endorsements, visit: LydiaEdwards.org/endorsements.
Councilor Lydia Edwards is a career advocate, activist,
and voice on behalf of society's most vulnerable. She is currently the Chair of
the Committee on Government Operations and the Committee on Housing and
Community Development in the Boston City Council. Learn more at LydiaEdwards.org/meet-lydia.
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