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Now reading: Chapter 62 - 49: Stage, Microphone, and the People from Forging America: My Campaign Manager is Roosevelt, a Fantasy novel by 2 Kuai Coin.

In just three short months, Leo’s campaign team had also undergone a complete transformation.

Karen Miller’s polling data arrived promptly on Leo’s desk each week.

The data clearly showed that as the project progressed, Leo’s satisfaction and support ratings in this community and several surrounding working-class communities were soaring at an astonishing rate.

Ethan Hawke systematically organized all the accomplishnts from the worksite into detailed policy reports and data charts.

The number of miles of road repaired, the square footage of apartnt exteriors renovated, the hours of work provided for unemployed workers...

Every number was precise, detailed, and powerfully convincing.

These reports provided plenty of ammunition for Leo’s upcoming campaign ssaging.

Sarah’s "Pittsburgh Heart" faithfully recorded every mont of the community’s journey from ruin to rebirth.

From the first bulldozer’s arrival to the last patch of sod being laid.

Frank, in turn, organized the several hundred workers who participated in the construction project into a highly cohesive "Worker Vanguard Team."

They weren’t just workers; they were Leo’s most solid ground force and most loyal advocates in the city.

’Very good, kid,’ Roosevelt’s voice sounded in Leo’s mind. ’You’ve successfully delivered on your first promise to the people.’

’In the world of politics, nothing is more persuasive than a tangible success story.’

’Now, your base has taken shape.’

Leo stood on the newly repaired stage at the community center.

Before him were hundreds of residents who had gathered on their own to attend the "Community Relaunch Ceremony," along with dozens of reporters who had rushed over after hearing the news.

All the groundwork and preparations were complete.

Today’s ceremony wasn’t just to mark the project’s completion; it was a rally for the political war to co.

The ceremony officially began.

There were no colorful banners hanging at the site. There was only a huge United States flag and a Pittsburgh city flag, fluttering in the wind before the renovated apartnt buildings.

As a matter of protocol, Leo had also sent an invitation to Mayor Carter Wright.

But his office had politely declined, stating that the Mayor’s schedule was too busy for him to attend.

Everyone knew full well that Carter Wright simply didn’t want to co.

So Old Mrs. Margaret, representing the community’s residents, took the stage to speak.

She stood before the microphone, and her voice carried over the loudspeakers.

"I was born in this community, in the grey house just behind this street."

"When I was a little girl, the air here didn’t sll like it does now. It slled of burning coal and cooling steel."

"My mother hated that sll. She said it would get her white bedsheets dirty when she hung them out to dry. But we kids loved it, because we knew it was the sll of work. It was the sll of bread and roast at on the dinner table."

"We grew up listening to the steel mill’s whistle."

"Seven in the morning, three in the afternoon, and eleven at night, the whistle would ring out across the entire river valley, right on ti."

"The sound was loud and powerful. It was our clock, and it was our lullaby. As long as that whistle was blowing, we knew our fathers were still at work, that life went on, and that the heart of this city was still beating."

"I rember my father. When he ca ho from work each day, his face, his hands, his work clothes—everything was covered in black coal dust. Only his teeth were white."

"He’d laugh and lift up, rubbing his prickly beard against my face. He slled of steel. Back then, I thought he was the strongest man in the world."

"Then, the war broke out."

"All the n in our neighborhood went to the factories. They worked in three shifts, nonstop, day and night. The steel they produced beca tanks, warships, and the bombers that flew over the skies of Europe."

"Back then, we were the ’Arsenal of Democracy.’ We were proud. We felt like we had won that war."

"After the war ended, we had the best of tis."

"The n ca ho from the war, and the steel mill had orders piled high as mountains. They used their paychecks to buy houses here, to buy brand-new Chevrolets."

"For the first ti, a neighbor’s kid got into college. We thought those good tis would last forever."

Margaret’s voice grew quiet. She paused for a mont, as if reminiscing about a history long buried by ti.

"Then, I’m not sure when it started, but the whistle stopped blowing."

"First it was the little factory across the river, then it was our community’s biggest, the Hostead Factory. One stopped, then a second. In the end, they all stopped."

"The sll in the air changed, too. It was no longer the sll of steel, but the sll of rust—a damp, decaying, suffocating sll."

"After dinner, the n no longer talked about how many tons of steel they’d produce the next day. They started gathering in the taverns in the afternoon, talking about which factory was laying people off next, and who was being thrown out of their house by the bank because they couldn’t make the mortgage."

"’For Sale’ signs sprouted up in our community overnight, and they were never taken down. All the young people left. They went to California, to Texas, to anywhere they could find a job. And they never ca back."

"We waited for decades. We got countless empty promises from politicians before elections. We got the pitying cara lenses of countless reporters covering the poverty here. But nothing changed."

"Our roads beca riddled with potholes. Our parks were overgrown with weeds. Our houses were slowly rotting. And just like this community, we were slowly getting old, slowly dying."

Margaret lifted her head, looking around at the brand-new surroundings.

"Until three months ago."

"I heard the roar of machinery again. But it wasn’t the sound of the steel mills; it was the sound of bulldozers and excavators."

"I slled the sll of work again. But it wasn’t the sll of coal; it was the sll of fresh asphalt and paint."

"I saw the unemployed n of our community put on their work clothes and pick up their tools again. The pride on their faces was the exact sa look my father had all those years ago."

Finally, she turned her gaze to Leo, standing below the stage.

"Leo Wallace, everyone says you’re just a young man in your twenties. But to us old-tirs, you remind us of ourselves when we were young."

"Back then, we were just like you. We believed that as long as we were willing to get our hands dirty, there was nothing we couldn’t change."

"You didn’t just bring back a Federation grant, or a construction contract."

"You brought back the soul of this community—a soul that had been stolen for decades."

"Thank you, child. Thank you for making us believe that even though the whistles will never blow again, our lives can begin anew."

Margaret’s voice trailed off.

The crowd in the square was instantly ignited.

Applause broke out in the front row, then quickly swelled into an ocean of sound.

It was a sound filled with decades of frustration, a farewell to the past, and a cry for the future.

Margaret turned and extended a hand toward Leo below the stage, her eyes moist with emotion.

Frank, standing behind Leo, gave him a solid pat on the back.

"Go on, kid! It’s your turn!"

At that mont, the crowd’s cheers grew even more fervent as they began to chant Leo’s na in unison.

Leo moved through the crowd and walked onto the humble yet incredibly sacred stage.

He looked at Margaret below the stage and gave a deep bow.

"Thank you, Margaret," his voice bood through the loudspeakers. "What you just shared wasn’t just your story. It’s the story of our community. It’s the story of all of Pittsburgh."

He paused, his gaze sweeping over the faces in the crowd.

"It’s a story of a past filled with decay and neglect, a story filled with rust and tears."

"And today, we stand here to write a brand-new beginning to that story with our own hands."

He raised a hand, pointing to the renewed surroundings, then to the workers and residents below, their faces beaming with pride.

"Three months ago, what did this place look like?"

His voice bood across the entire square from the microphone.

"A wasteland where children had nowhere to play! And now, look at it!"

"Who changed all this?"

"It wasn’t the politicians sitting in their offices in Washington! It wasn’t the bankers living in luxury apartnts downtown!"

He pointed to the workers in blue coveralls in the crowd.

"It was you! With your own two hands!"

The workers in the crowd puffed out their chests and erupted in thunderous cheers.

"They say we steelworkers are obsolete, a relic of a bygone era! They say we’re a burden on this city!"

"But today, with our own actions, we have proven to them that we are the true builders of this city! We are this city’s undying soul!"

At that mont, the speech reached its crescendo.

Leo’s voice, filled with power, echoed throughout the entire community.

"But, my friends, the rebirth of a single community is far from enough!"

"As long as those politicians—the ones who only care about the numbers in their bank accounts and have long forgotten the suffering of the people—are still sitting safely in their City Hall offices, everything we’ve worked so hard for today could be overturned tomorrow by a single, aningless scrap of paper!"

"They’re afraid to see us united! They’re afraid to see us change our own destiny with our own two hands!"

"So we can’t be satisfied with just fixing up our own hos! We must take back what has always rightfully belonged to all of us—the leadership of this city!"

He paused, his gaze sweeping over every face in the crowd, each one filled with excitent and anticipation.

Then, with all the strength in his body, he shouted the words he had been holding back for so long.

"I, Leo Wallace, hereby officially announce, here today, before all the builders of Pittsburgh:"

"I am running for the office of Mayor of Pittsburgh!"

His voice fell.

For a brief mont, the entire square fell silent.

Then, a cheer like a tidal wave erupted, a roar of applause and celebration.

"Leo! Leo! Leo!"

The people chanted his na, the sound thundering to the heavens.

Under the frenzied flash of the dia’s caras, Leo Wallace—the keyboard warrior who once had nothing, the idealist everyone had once mocked—officially stepped onto Pittsburgh’s political stage as a powerful challenger.

anwhile, in the Mayor’s Office, Carter Wright was watching it all unfold on a live television broadcast.

He watched the young man on the screen, surrounded by a throng of people, raising his arms in a heroic cheer.

He watched that young, determined face on the screen, and the fanatical supporters behind him.

His worst nightmare had finally beco a reality.

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