Descubra Nikkei

https://www.discovernikkei.org/pt/interviews/clips/1217/

The last hurdle – President Reagan

There was a fellow by the name of Grant...

I*: Ujifusa.

Ujifusa, and Grant was an editor with the Reader's Digest. And we were talking about this, and I said, "You know, Grant, we're not over the hill yet on this thing." And he said, "Well, you know, Governor Tom Kean of New Jersey is going to be with President Reagan, and he's going to be in the car with him for about an hour. Suppose we brief Governor Kean about this bill and have him talk to President Reagan about it, and not veto the bill?" So I said that would be great, so we pulled all that material together, and Grant went to see Governor Kean and convinced him that in this conversation when he's in the President's car, that he should talk to President Reagan about it, so we did that.

Also, remember, when President Reagan was Captain Reagan, he was there when, when, was it Sergeant Masuda, couldn't be buried in his own hometown cemetery. And so Captain Reagan was at the burial of captain, I mean, of Sergeant Masuda even though it wasn't in his hometown grave. Wherever he got buried, Captain Reagan was there. So we had someone else remind the President of that occurrence. And in fact, I think there's a picture of him at that cemetery, or at the funeral service, and they even gave him a picture of that to remind him. But it was really Governor Kean who talked to President Reagan about why he shouldn't veto this bill.

* "I" indicates an interviewer (Tom Ikeda).


governos política Redress movement

Data: July 4, 2008

Localização Geográfica: Colorado, US

Entrevistado: Tom Ikeda

País: Watase Media Arts Center, Japanese American National Museum

Entrevistados

Norman Mineta nasceu em 12 de novembro de 1931 em San Jose, na Califórnia. Ele e sua família foram encarcerados no campo de internamento Heart Mountain durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial.

Mineta iniciou sua carreira política ao ser indicado para preencher um posto vago no Conselho Municipal de San Jose. Ele foi eleito ao cargo no mandato seguinte; depois atuou como vice-prefeito, e finalmente prefeito de San Jose em 1971.

Mineta serviu na Câmara dos Deputados dos E.U.A. de 1975 a 1995, e teve um papel crucial na aprovação da Lei dos Direitos Civis de 1988, H.R. 442. Esta lei incluía um pedido de perdão oficial, como também indenizações pelo encarceramento em massa inconstitucional de nipo-americanos durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial

No ano 2000, Mineta se tornou o primeiro asiático-americano a exercer um cargo no gabinete presidencial ao ser apontado pelo presidente Bill Clinton como Ministro do Comércio. No ano seguinte, George W. Bush o escolheu como Ministro dos Transportes. Mineta era o único Democrata no gabinete de Bush, e acabou servindo como Ministro dos Transportes pelo período mais longo desde a criação do cargo em 1967. (Dezembro 2011)

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