Shelbyās not a career politician. She broke the generational chains to the assembly line and chose people over power.
Hello everyone,
My name is Shelby Campbell, and Iām running for Congressānot because itās been my lifelong dream, but because itās our time to take charge.
I respect and appreciate the previous generations who paved the way, but the world has changed drastically since many of the people in power first took office. Politics is supposed to be about service, not status. Itās supposed to be for the people, not a fallback job for those with a political science degree and connections.
I donāt come from Capitol HillāI come from a union hall. Iām not running because I think Iām smarter. Iām running because Iāve lived what so many in District 13 are still living through: long shifts, childcare struggles, low wages, and high expectations with very little support. This isnāt theory to me. Itās life.
As a third-generation automotive worker, I was raised in the heart of the labor movement. Iāve succeeded in this capitalistic society, sureābut I also know the emotional gaps it leaves behind. I thank my parents for the tangible things and the good times, but what I longed for most was connectionāsomething so many working-class families are forced to sacrifice just to survive.
We, the millennials, were told all our lives: āWhen you grow up, you get to make the rules.ā Wellāweāre grown now. And weāre making the rules.
We are the bridge generationāwe lived before social media and after it. We know how to fact-check with an encyclopedia and with Google Scholar. We have the memory of what was, and the imagination of what could be.
This campaign isnāt about power. Itās about people. Itās about reclaiming our voice, rebuilding our communities, and rewriting the rules to work for us.
First time walking for graduation since I was 6 years old. Itās rareājust 19% of studentāparents at community college complete their degree in six years.I beat the oddsāand I did it for me.
Marcello and Alonzoās father is also a third-generation automotive worker,
but now they get to watch their mom level upāand know they can too.
Community matters. Weāve forgotten that.
Cities nurture connection. Suburbs sell convenience.
Iām raising my boys to find joy in the simple thingsāsand between their fingers, time with family, and love that doesnāt come with a price tag.
Connect with me
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