"Let us be clear: This is absolutely no time to hide in the shadows. We cannot let fear or the comfort of complacency prevent us from moving forward," Jayapal, 51, asserted.
"We must stand together-not just to stop the disastrous rollback of decades of progress in this country but to protect the vision of a united country that celebrates its rich diversity and honours its immigrants, women, and people of colour as a singular indication that we are, in fact, a truly civilised society," she said.
Born in Chennai, she left India at the age of five for Indonesia, Singapore and then came to the US at the age of 16.
After her election, Jayapal, who ran her elections on a progressive agenda, has described Trump's victory as shocking.
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"It is becoming more and more clear that we will need a strong line of defence against a Trump presidency that chooses to curtail our rights as immigrants, people of colour, and women," she wrote in a blog on Broadly published yesterday.
Undocumented mothers, who have given everything for their children (and who are often US citizens), continue to be shaken to their core by the idea that they will be targets in a political war on immigrants - a notion that makes absolutely no practical sense in a country that is fuelled by the labour of immigrants, Jayapal said.
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