The Free Press Journal

Twins run for US office - for rival parties

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The African American sisters running for local office in the US state of Michigan forged an unbreakabl­e bond during a childhood tarred by abuse. They wear the same white dress and even finish each other's sentences.

But their choice of jewellery — a blue flower pin for Sparks, a red one for Tyson — gives away the one key thing separating the 46year-old women: their political stripes.

Sparks is a Democrat. Tyson is a Republican.

They say they are proof positive that political difference­s can be overcome, even in an increasing­ly polarised America. “It just baffles our mind why people hate each other,” Tyson tells AFP in a joint interview with sister. “Mothers aren’t talking to sons. Fathers are disowning daughters.” “We are not going to let this come between our family,” says Sparks.

Sparks and Tyson live in neighborin­g electoral districts in the Midwestern state — part of the country’s traditiona­lly Democratic Rust Belt that, against all odds, helped Donald Trump win the presidency.

Each is campaignin­g for a seat on the governing board that oversees Kent County, which is home to 640,000 people and is the state’s second most populous area, after Detroit. The primary election is on August 7. Sparks faces several Democratic rivals, while Tyson is running unopposed for the Republican nomination.

The twins say they agree on broad ideas: they both want to live a life of service and to reduce political discord. The rest, they say, can be negotiated. “We need to start finding common ground, period, if we're going to get ahead as a society,” says Sparks.

Sparks and Tyson say they have been close all of their lives, relying on each other as children when they couldn’t rely on adults.

Born in 1972 to a heroin-addicted mother in the state capital Lansing, they were sent to a terrible foster home at the age of five.

Sparks says they were abused “emotionall­y, physically, sexually,” and Tyson remembers her sister rummaging through trash cans looking for food. “We went through a lot of abuse together,” Tyson says. “And together we got through.”

The girls eventually were adopted by loving parents, who instilled in them a sense of civic duty. As adults, they have volunteere­d for various causes, served on their school board and other local agencies, while running small businesses. Now, they hope to serve in a formal political capacity.

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