Sara didn't flip her Assembly district from red to blue because she had the biggest war chest or the flashiest campaign. She won because she showed up, listened, and put in the work — day after day, door after door, conversation after conversation.
That's the only way we're going to win this primary. And it's the only way we're going to beat Tom Tiffany in November.
This campaign isn't about one person. It's about all of us rolling up our sleeves and doing the hard work together — making calls, knocking doors, talking to our neighbors about what's at stake.
If this isn't a team effort, we've got a problem. Because Sara can't do this alone, and neither can we.
Right now, we're building the kind of grassroots operation that wins tough races in battleground states like ours. We're organizing in all 72 counties and having real conversations with voters about healthcare costs, housing, child care, and the chaos coming out of Washington.
But campaigns like this don't run on good intentions. They run on resources — field staff, voter contact, organizing infrastructure. The unglamorous stuff that actually wins elections.
So if you want to see Sara win the Governor's office next year, we need you to chip in now, before our end-of-year deadline expires.