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Working with representatives across political and geographic boundaries is important, says Pennsylvania state senator Nikil Saval – The Times of India

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Working with representatives across political and geographic boundaries is important, says Pennsylvania state senator Nikil Saval – The Times of India


Democrat Pennsylvania state senator Nikil Saval represents the first district, which is the heart of Philadelphia. First elected in 2020, Senator Saval was re-elected in November 2024. He started his political career working with the labour union movement and in 2016 joined Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign. Since assuming office, Senator Saval has been working on issues of housing, climate, and worker justice. He spoke to Ishani Duttagupta of the Times of India on the challenges faced by Indian Americans choosing a career in politics and public life; the need for bipartisanship on legislation that impact the lives of common people and several other issues. Edited excerpts from the interview.
Q: You won the state senate election in Pennsylvania first in 2020 and were re-elected in 2024 – as a second generation Indian immigrant, what were the reasons for you to choose public life as a career option?
A: I chose to be involved in trade union and labour organising and was motivated to join politics because of my opposition to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. I was trying to find ways of engaging in politics so that we could build pure political power – on the one hand, to stop disruptive wars and direct the resources of US government towards peace and, on the other hand, build support for working class people in the US and across the world. I became a volunteer, researcher and organiser for the hospitality union which includes workers in hotels, restaurants, sports arenas, and airports etc. There are immigrants from east and south Asia, Latin America, and a broad group of White and Black workers, all working together to build political power. And that was a formative experience for me. The second thing that changed my trajectory was working with the Bernie Sanders campaign in 2016. I thought that it was for the first time that there was the real possibility of a transformational candidate for president. And it was his example that helped many in Philadelphia to organise and try to win local elections. Even though he lost the election, many people who were inspired by him, won elections in Philadelphia and I helped them to get elected. And that experience ultimately inspired me to run for office in the state myself. In the US political system, government at the state level is very powerful.

Nikil Saval

Q: You were part of Senator Sanders’ presidential campaign and have supported him; in what ways has he inspired you? What is your future vision for the Democratic Party?
A: For me the Democratic Party is the party for supporting workers and workers’ rights and civil rights. It is also the party supporting environmental justice. But the party has not always been that party. Right now, and for many years the party has been too been beholden to wealthy supporters and has been supportive of wars. Many Democrats supported the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Barack Obama, when he was president, expanded conflict to multiple countries and our last Democratic president was far too supportive of Israel’s war in Gaza. So, we need to move again towards being a party that supports working class people and organising their lives better and a party that supports peace.
Q: Your parents, who immigrated from India, were small business owners. Did you get a lot of support from Indian Americans for your election campaigns?
A: Absolutely. While the district that I represent is not very Indian American; with some Indian American professionals working in hospitals and in financial services; overall the region has a huge number of Indian Americans. There are many nurses here who came from Kerala. But there are very few south Asians in government and I find it important to meet Indian Americans everywhere in the state. In north east Pennsylvania, there are Indian Americans working in service professions, there are many working in taxi services and in casinos. People from the sub-continent work in several professions and as an elected government representative, it is important for me to seek out Indian Americans wherever they are. Even though I may not represent the district that they are in; I am a representative of the community.

Nikil Saval

Q: Do you see many Indian Americans like yourself choosing a career in public life and politics in your state as well as across the US? What are the challenges?
A: There has been an enormous transformation since my childhood when there were very few members of the community in public life. I will attribute some of that to the relative newness of the community. When you first arrive in a country, politics is a risky profession and in many cases those who choose a career in politics are barely paid or not paid at all. So that is not something that you are necessarily encouraged to go into; though my parents have always been very encouraging. But there has been a major change in the last five years; the number of Indian Americans in public life has exploded. We are seeing more diversity generally in the public sphere and President Obama was an inspiration. Even though not an Indian, you can still see part of yourself in his background. Then there are also organisations that have sprung up to help Indian Americans seeking a career in public life such as Indian American Impact, a national organisation, and Asia Pacific Islander Political Alliance in Pennsylvania, which works for all Asian Americans. It helps to see yourself as part of political projects and those are the things helping people see themselves get involved in politics. I think the challenges are twofold; the political establishment does not know what to do with Indian Americans and I think they don’t see where their allegiances lie or where their partisan affiliations are. There are several Indian Americans who are Republicans and who will be involved in the Cabinet of Donald Trump; but overwhelmingly the Indian American population has a Democratic leaning. Most of us are Democratic and finding a distinctive political identity and acceptance is a challenge. There are only a handful of places where the majority of people will be Indian American; so, you will have to work to represent lots and lots of different people and build broad coalitions.
Q: You are a role model in the community. Do a lot of young Indian Americans reach out to you for mentorship?
A: There are a lot of people reaching out including high school students and journalists. I make it a point to speak to any Indian American who wants to speak with me. If in the same position, I would have appreciated the conversation. There are a lot of volunteers in the political campaigns I have run and many people look for advice or support. I make it a point to encourage and help guide people who are looking for a path to enter politics. They don’t necessarily have to run for office but could be trying to find a foothold in public life. I certainly wanted that myself and would like to help provide that opportunity to other people.
Q: In 2022, you worked for bipartisan support for a pathbreaking legislation, are you looking at working across the aisle for other Bills in future?
A: Certainly, it is a practical matter. Pennsylvania has a divided government; with a Republican majority in the upper chamber; while the governor is Democrat and we control the state House. Generally, the issues that I care about and the issues that we need to work on have no partisan basis. Housing is an issue that affects people in rural and urban areas and both Democrats and Republicans are for safe, stable, and universal housing. We have to appeal to people outside of our partisan basis and work with representatives across political and geographic boundaries. The legislation that I am already working on is to increase the supply of housing and to make it easier for renters. Those Bills already have bipartisan support and we are going to reintroduce them. As the chair of the urban affairs and housing committee, I will be working with Republican colleagues to advance priorities. I think it is essential for the nature of the issues that we work on.
Q: Has your Indian heritage helped shape your journey?
A: My parents are from Bangalore [Bengaluru] and I grew up speaking English and Kannada. Now, my parents live close to us and we spend a lot of time together. We visit temples and celebrate festivals like Ganesha Habba. I helped pass a Bill to make Diwali a state holiday in Pennsylvania. We visited India in December 2023, for the first time with my two boys, Ishaan, and Mayukh; they are six and three. Many of my uncles and cousins are in India and I have usually visited India every two or three years. During the pandemic there was a long stretch that I did not.
Q: What do you like doing in India?
A: Both my children and I love south Indian food. We love Indian meals and my kids love dosa. When we were in Bengaluru, they would eat traditional south Indian food all three meals a day. We did travel a bit in south India. I have travelled to Kerala, Delhi, Agra, Rajasthan, and Kolkata, which is one of my favourite cities. We love to go to local markets and to visit temples. I love Indian cinema and Carnatic music and like to go to classical music programmes.
Q: Lately there has been a lot of racist rhetoric in the US against Indian professionals; as an elected government representative, have you been approached by Indians in your district, for support against such attacks?
A: I strongly reject the racist and xenophobic rhetoric that we have seen around the H-1B visa programme and against immigrants. This increased in the election year and in recent years. Immigrants of all status are fundamental to key sectors of our economy and, as an example, we would not have a functional healthcare system if we did not have huge number of professionals, on different immigration status, working at every level of healthcare delivery. Agriculture is another sector that depends on immigrant workers. So, far from demonising people who seek opportunities in the US; we should be celebrating and encouraging them to come to the US. Many visas tend to be exploitative and people should have more security in their job and work lives when they come here to work. This issue has come up in the community and there are concerns. Recently I heard this conversation among Malayalis in Philadelphia. While certainly there are concerns; but broadly people in the US are supportive because many have been helped by someone on an H-1B visa.





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Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania State Police trooper killed in crash along Interstate 81

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Pennsylvania State Police trooper killed in crash along Interstate 81


Thursday, July 2, 2026 3:58AM

Pennsylvania State Police trooper killed in crash along Interstate 81

CASS TWP., Pa. (WPVI) — A Pennsylvania State Police trooper was killed after being hit by a vehicle on Wednesday morning in Schuylkill County.

Tpr. Michael Pahira Jr. was struck while conducting a commercial vehicle safety inspection around 7 a.m. along Interstate 81 in Cass Township.

According to state police, a passing commercial vehicle hit Pahira while he was conducting the inspection with his emergency lights activated.

That vehicle then collided with the vehicle that was being inspected and caught fire.

The driver of the striking vehicle was being treated at an area hospital. There was no immediate word on whether the driver would be charged.

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Pahira, 44, was assigned to Troop L, Frackville and had been with the state police for 20 years.

Copyright © 2026 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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From Chocolate Avenue to the World Cup, how Hershey, Pennsylvania, shaped Christian Pulisic

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From Chocolate Avenue to the World Cup, how Hershey, Pennsylvania, shaped Christian Pulisic


HERSHEY, Pa. (AP) — Hershey may be known as the “Sweetest Place on Earth,” thanks to its chocolate-drenched origins, but the Pennsylvania community is also home to Christian Pulisic — the most accomplished and famous player on a U.S. national team that’s dreaming big as it co-hosts the World Cup.

“Hershey to me is everything — it’s where my family is from, it’s where I grew up,” Pulisic recently said on his Instagram account as he promoted limited-edition Pulisic’s Milk Chocolate Bars by the Hershey Company that feature custom wrappers with his signature. “It’s where I learned how to play. It’s just home.”

A billboard featuring U.S. soccer player Christian Pulisic is pictured on the side of the Hotel Figueroa, Monday, June 29, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)

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Pulisic grew up in this south-central Pennsylvania community surrounded by farms and rolling countryside, where even the streetlights along Chocolate Avenue are shaped like Hershey’s Kisses. The community was founded in 1903 by Milton S. Hershey, the American businessman and philanthropist who also built homes for workers, a hotel and a theme park that Pulisic often visited with family.

More than 120 years later, the Hershey Company is still the economic engine of Chocolatetown, USA. But the “Man Behind the Chocolate Bar” now shares the hometown hero honor with the soccer player nicknamed “Captain America.”

Pulisic inspires young soccer players in Hershey

Pulisic’s hometown roots run deep, and during the World Cup, his community has rallied around him as the U.S. plays some of its most exciting soccer ever.

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“It’s pretty amazing that he came from Hershey and played for my club,” said Hershey High School rising freshman Cecelia Stefanelli who, on a recent afternoon, kicked a ball to score a goal on her father at a field where Pulisic played.

The Americans will attempt to win their first World Cup elimination game in 24 years on Wednesday evening, when they face Bosnia-Herzegovina in the round of 32 in Santa Clara, California. They should have a healthy Pulisic after the star missed the second group-stage game with a calf injury and played only 33 minutes as a sub in the final group match against Turkey.

“I’d love if USA won the World Cup; it’d make me happy,” said Stefanelli, a center back who also plays for the Pennsylvania Classics soccer club. Pulisic often credits the structure and coaches at PA Classics, where he played for eight years, with helping develop his skills. In 2021, he returned to the club for a ribbon-cutting ceremony for new fields that he financed and helped design. It’s now known as the Pulisic Stomping Grounds.

The club is located in Lancaster County, surrounded by chicken and dairy farms that give off a pungent odor of fermenting feed and manure.

On a recent day, Liam Gustafson and Moussa Oumarou juggled a soccer ball and passed it back and forth as they warmed up for training in front of a huge collage of photos of Pulisic that trace from his childhood training to starring for the U.S. at the World Cup.

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“It’s really special to see someone from around here, where we live, playing in the World Cup,” said Gustafson, a 17-year-old forward who dreams of playing pro soccer and calls Pulisic his role model. “It’s really inspiring to see someone who paved the way, so that we can do that someday.”

Pulisic’s path to USMNT stardom ran through Hershey

The road to soccer was paved early as Pulisic followed in the footsteps of his parents. He was born in Hershey on Sept. 18, 1998, to Kelley and Mark Pulisic, both former collegiate soccer players at George Mason University. His father went on to play pro indoor soccer for the Harrisburg Heat. The family moved to England for a year while Pulisic’s mother completed a Fulbright Program teacher exchange and their 7-year-old rising star played for the Brackley Town youth team.

Pennsylvania Classic players Moussa Oumarou, left, and Liam Gustafson, right, juggle the ball before training at the club were U.S. national team soccer player, Christian Pulisic, honed his skills in Manheim, Pa., on Monday, June 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)

Pennsylvania Classic players Moussa Oumarou, left, and Liam Gustafson, right, juggle the ball before training at the club were U.S. national team soccer player, Christian Pulisic, honed his skills in Manheim, Pa., on Monday, June 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)

Cecelia Stefanelli, a rising freshman at Hershey High School, kicks a ball to score a goal against father, Justin Stefanelli, at a field where U.S. soccer national team star, Christian Pulisic, played when he was in school, in Hershey, Pa., on Tuesday, June 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)

Cecelia Stefanelli, a rising freshman at Hershey High School, kicks a ball to score a goal against father Justin Stefanelli at a field where U.S. soccer national team star, Christian Pulisic, played when he was in school, in Hershey, Pa., on Tuesday, June 30, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)
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“Mark and Kelley could write a playbook on how to raise a humble, smart, kind superstar, while maintaining family relationships,” said Tara Seymour, a family friend and retired health and physical education teacher at Hershey Middle School. She met the family at a soccer camp and became close friends with Pulisic’s mother.

“She just quietly said to me one time, ‘We have never seen anything like this.’ This is a kid who could juggle the soccer ball hundreds of times when he was in elementary school,” Seymour said. Pulisic, she said, would practice in his backyard for hours, trying to emulate the moves of pros he saw on TV.

“He has an intensity that couldn’t be taught,” she recalled. “I think he had the opportunity to go pro earlier or go to Europe earlier and they held back just to make sure emotionally and maturity-wise he was ready.”

When the family returned to Hershey, Pulisic joined PA Classics at the age of 10. The club’s president and co-founder Doug Harris said Pulisic’s talent allowed him to play with older age groups, and he was often the smallest player on the field.

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“I think if you were to pull kids in the world who want to achieve the level of Christian Pulisic, you’d have millions that would step up, raise their hand. They’re all gifted; they all can play,” Harris said. “But there’s something fundamental about what Christian has been able to do and I’d credit Mark and Kelley Pulisic with a lot of that.”

Looking forward to the future of American soccer

The Americans’ only World Cup knockout win came on June 17, 2002, when they defeated Mexico 2-0 in the round of 16 in South Korea. Pulisic has said the team’s approach won’t change in this round and the mood remains light despite the high stakes.

“It’s just special to be here,” he said. “You just don’t want it to end.”

Pennsylvania Classic coaches, Brittney Jakobson, left, and Nick Jakobson, right, look at a banner of U.S. national team soccer player Christian Pulisic with their children, Declan Jakobson, who wears an Argentina jersey, and Camden Jakobson, wearing a Portugal jersey, at the club were Pulisic honed his skills in Manheim, Pa., on Monday, June 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)

Pennsylvania Classic coaches, Brittney Jakobson, left, and Nick Jakobson, right, look at a banner of U.S. national team soccer player Christian Pulisic with their children, Declan Jakobson, who wears an Argentina jersey, and Camden Jakobson, wearing a Portugal jersey, at the club were Pulisic honed his skills in Manheim, Pa., on Monday, June 29, 2026. (AP Photo/Luis Andres Henao)

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Ahead of the game against Bosnia-Herzegovina, PA Classics coaches Brittney Jakobson and Nick Jakobson took their children, Declan and Camden, to kick a ball at Pulisic’s former club. The Americans, they said, have a shot at winning the tournament. But their legacy goes beyond the trophy.

“Their goal is to inspire a generation and it’s really fun to see that happening in real time … to hear people going out and watching the games, to see people buying the jerseys,” Brittney Jakobson said.

“Pulisic, obviously, in the short term is a great kind of figure to follow,” said Nick Jakobson. “But he does very much encourage that it’s not just about him. It’s not about just these four years. It’s about the next eight, 12, 16. It’s forward-thinking, and they’re laying a good foundation for what we can build on.”

___

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See more of AP’s World Cup coverage here





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10-year-old stabbed Dollar Tree employee during robbery in Pennsylvania, police say

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10-year-old stabbed Dollar Tree employee during robbery in Pennsylvania, police say


Generic police lights (FOX 9)

A 10-year-old boy who allegedly robbed a Dollar Tree store in Pennsylvania is also accused of stabbing multiple times one of the employees trying to detain him.

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The Swatara Township Police Department reported that its officers were called around 5 p.m. on Monday to the discount store in Harrisburg where they found the boy being held by store employees. 

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After speaking with witnesses, officers determined that the grade-school-age child went into the store holding a fixed-blade knife, threatened an employee, and told her to give him all the money.

Customs officers use Heimlich maneuver to save choking toddler

The employee’s co-workers jumped in to help her. As they struggled to subdue the boy, he stabbed one of them multiple times, the police department reported. Its statement did not indicate how badly that employee was injured, only saying that medical treatment was needed.

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The suspect was taken by officers to a detention facility where he was booked on counts of robbery, aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and possessing an instrument of a crime.

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The Source: Information for this article was taken from Swatara Township Police Department. This story was reported from Orlando.

 

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