They're known as Team Awesome: a crew of young people from different walks of life, brought together by a burning motivation to end an ongoing campaign in Arizona to criminalize their existence.
This army of activists pushed Latinos in a West Phoenix community to increase their voter turnout by nearly 500 percent, successfully electing a second Latino to the Phoenix City Council in 2011.
How these kids found each other is almost as amazing as the work they do on a daily basis — registering new voters, inspiring dormant voters, explaining to both why their vote matters, and spreading the word about worthy candidates to potential voters across the Valley. It started with a young, but experienced, organizer named Joseph Larios working with the Maricopa County Democratic Party. During a visit to Grand Canyon University in search of new recruits, he found Viri Hernandez. The pair later showed up at a Maricopa County Community College board meeting during talks of tuition hikes for undocumented students, where they heard Tony Valdovino, a fiery young man speaking boldly in opposition to the inevitable increase. And so it went, each new recruit bringing in more high school, community college, and university students — many undocumented immigrants — who were willing to walk during the blistering summer heat, pack into cars without air-conditioning, and sleep on their members' living room floors when they were short on cars but wanted to get an early start out in the field the following day. Why? To spread a message to the Latino community that casting a ballot for a politician who supports them in their fight for national immigration reform and passage of the DREAM Act, and resists laws that criminalize their mere presence in the United States, is casting a vote for a better future. As they note on their Facebook page, they have a "keen eye for leaders . . . [and] know how [to] mold them into someone more powerful than they ever thought possible." These student volunteers may not all be able to vote, but they are voting vicariously hundreds — make that thousands — of times through their eligible friends, families and neighbors.