The Political Outsider Ayla Kadah ’13 Carves Out a Space in US Politics BY JOHANNA LEE ’13
Kadah (center) at a rally after the 2017 Muslim ban
A
yla Kadah ’13 never imagined she would end up working in US state legislation. Raised in Syria, Kadah moved to Jordan in 2012 to attend her senior year at King’s. Prior to joining King’s, she hadn’t given much thought to her future plans. “I feel like King’s was my first step to getting to the things that I do now,” she says. “King’s made me feel more inclined to think strategically about my future and was very important in helping me determine where my opportunity lies and what my calling was.” 6
BEYOND KING’S
While in her third year as a psychology and communications major at the University of Washington in Seattle, Kadah began volunteering for the presidential campaign of Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders. It was the first time in her life Kadah became involved in political organizing and activism. “I kind of discovered the civic process,” she says, smiling. “I didn’t really know what I was doing — I was learning as I was going. I just started saying yes to everything.” Leaping into the new world of civic engagement, Kadah ran as a delegate
for the 2016 Democratic National Convention, an event at which elected representatives — delegates — select the presidential nominee for the Democratic Party, one of the two main political parties in the United States. Following a competitive local election, Kadah was selected as a Washington state delegate to the Convention. One of almost 5,000 delegates from across the country, Kadah engaged in dynamic and passionate discussions with her peers, cementing her interest in American politics. Returning to Washington, Kadah engrossed herself fully in her newfound