logo
Valparaiso University President Jose Padilla speaks at final graduation, urges grads to lean into greatness

Valparaiso University President Jose Padilla speaks at final graduation, urges grads to lean into greatness

Chicago Tribune11-05-2025
Valparaiso University President José Padilla spoke at his final commencement ceremonies Saturday, urging graduates, 'Don't run away from greatness. Lean into it hard.'
'Maybe one of you will be a United States senator in the state or Indiana or the state of Illinois. It's entirely possible,' he said.
Others will go on to greatness in their chosen fields, Padilla said.
The university is searching for a new president as Padilla heads toward retirement.
'This fortress of faith, this school that punches above its weight,' will continue to embrace the graduates well into the future, he said.
'We're going to be the angels on your shoulders that will give the answers to you when you're facing the hardest questions of your lives,' he said.
If the graduates live to 80 years old, their time at VU will be just 5% of their lives, but they will have outsized importance. 'These four years, these 1,460 days, will be the most consequential and impactful of your lives, he told them.
'The friends you have right here now will be your friends 20, 30, 40 years from now,' even if you don't see them for years, Padilla said.
'Forty years from now, you will still remember the professors would not accept mediocrity from you,' he told them.
'Here you know that the power of a sharp mind is magnified 10 times by a soft and loving heart,' Padilla said.
'Because of you, I'm so much more optimistic about the future of our world,' he said.
Older generations have created a divided world. Padilla urged the freshly minted graduates to be repairers of the breach.
'You've got this world where you want it because they won't see you coming,' Padilla said. 'We know who you are, and they don't know what you're capable of doing.'
'Your values will guide you like a north star,' Gloria Castillo, who led The Chicago Community Trust's five-year We Rise Together: For an Equitable and Just Recovery initiative, told the graduates.
'Use your voice,' she said. 'Responsible exercise value and voice in a larger environment.'
'Make a mark on the world that cannot be erased,' she said. 'Make a difference and have some fun along the way.'
New graduate Peyton Evans urged fellow grads to 'remember you hold the power to grow beyond one label.'
'College gives us more than just a degree,' she said. At VU, she met strangers who have become friends. 'Embrace every moment, both the joy and the struggles.'
Evans was a member of the first class to go all four years with Beacons as the teams' name. 'When the university announced we would be Beacons, I really had no idea what that was,' she said. As a student, she learned about beacons' role in lighting the way.
Among the Beacons who graduated Saturday is Isaiah Stafford, of Bolingbrook, Illinois, a point guard and shooting guard on the men's basketball team. The first game was an emotional time for him, but he singled out his work in the weight room. 'We always had a good time in the weight room,' he said.
Paulette Burnett, of Oswego, Illinois, is proud of Stafford, her first grandchild to graduate from college. 'I'm so proud,' she said, holding a cardboard cutout of her grandson to cheer for him during the ceremony.
Mason Greve, of Valparaiso, commuted for his first three years and lived in a fraternity house his final year. 'That pretty much changed my college experience,' making it seem less like an extension of high school, he said.
'At the end of the day, it was the best decision I could have made' to attend VU, he said.
Rayne Velazquez, of Hammond, commuted the whole time. Her mortarboard was adorned with a sparkly tribute to Psalm 23 to 'give my respects to God and how he was here for me,' she said.
A death in the family made her time at Valpo difficult for Velazquez, but professors helped her get through it.
Many of Velazquez's classmates from Hammond went to Purdue University Northwest. 'I wanted a change in environment,' and her parents were proud of her for being accepted to Valparaiso.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

From the Olympics to Oakland, California braces for Trump National Guard deployments
From the Olympics to Oakland, California braces for Trump National Guard deployments

Los Angeles Times

time13-08-2025

  • Los Angeles Times

From the Olympics to Oakland, California braces for Trump National Guard deployments

President Trump's decision to deploy hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington has California officials on high alert, with some worrying that he intends to activate federal forces in the Bay Area and Southern California, especially during the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. Trump said that his use of the National Guard to fight crime could expand to other cities, and suggested that local police have been unable to do the job. Legal experts say it is highly unusual and troubling for forces to be deployed without a major crisis, such as civil unrest or a natural disaster. The Washington deployment is another example of Trump seeking to use the military for domestic endeavors, similar to his decision to send the National Guard to Los Angeles in June, amid an immigration crackdown that sparked protests, experts said. Washington has long struggled with crime but has seen major reductions in recent years. Officials in Oakland and Los Angeles — two cities the president mentioned by name — slammed Trump's comments about crime in their cities. Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee said in a statement that the president's characterization wasn't rooted in fact, but 'based in fear-mongering in an attempt to score cheap political points.' Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass called it 'performative' and a 'stunt.' Trump has said he would consider deploying the military to Los Angeles once again to protect the 2028 Olympic Games. This month, he signed an executive order that named him chair of a White House task force on the Los Angeles Games. The White House has not said specifically what role Trump would play in security arrangements. Los Angeles City Councilmember Imelda Padilla, who sits on the city panel overseeing the Games, acknowledged last week that the city is a 'little nervous' about the federal government's plans for securing the event. Congress recently approved $1 billion for security and planning for the Games. A representative for the Department of Homeland Security declined to explain to The Times how the funds will be used. Padilla said her concern was based on the unpredictable nature of the administration, as well as recent immigration raids that have used masked, heavily armed agents to round up people at Home Depot parking lots and car washes. 'Everything that we're seeing with the raids was a real curveball to our city,' Padilla said during a Los Angeles Current Affairs Forum event. It dealt 'a real curveball to [efforts] to focus on the things that folks care about, like homelessness, like transportation ... economic development,' she said. Bass, appearing on CNN this week, said that using the National Guard during the Olympics is 'completely appropriate.' She said that the city expects a 'federal response when we have over 200 countries here, meaning heads of state of over 200 countries. Of course you have the military involved. That is routine.' But Bass made a distinction between L.A. Olympics security and the 'political stunt' she said Trump pulled by bringing in the National Guard and the U.S. Marines after protests over the federal government's immigration crackdown. That deployment faces ongoing legal challenges, with an appeals court ruling that Trump had the legal authority to send the National Guard. 'I believed then, and I believe now that Los Angeles was a test case, and I think D.C. is a test case as well,' Bass said. 'To say, well, we can take over your city whenever we want, and I'm the commander in chief, and I can use the troops whenever we want.' On Monday, Trump tied his action to what has been a familiar theme to him: perceived urban decay. 'You look at Chicago, how bad it is, you look at Los Angeles, how bad it is. We have other cities that are very bad. New York has a problem. And then you have, of course, Baltimore and Oakland. We don't even mention that anymore —they're so far gone,' he said. 'We're not going to let it happen. We're not going to lose our cities over this.' White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said officers and agents deployed across the District of Columbia have so far made 23 arrests for offenses including homicide, possession with intent to distribute narcotics, lewd acts, reckless driving, fare evasion and not having permits. Six illegal handguns were seized, she said. Citing crime as a reason to deploy National Guard troops without the support of a state governor is highly unprecedented, experts said. The National Guard has been deployed to Southern California before, notably during the 1992 L.A. riots and the civil unrest after George Floyd's murder in Minneapolis in 2020. 'It would be awful because he would be clearly violating his legal authorities and he'd be sued again by the governor and undoubtedly, by the mayors of L.A. and Oakland,' said William Banks, a law professor at Syracuse University. 'The citizens in those cities would be up in arms. They would be aghast that there are soldiers patrolling their streets.' The District of Columbia does not have control over its National Guard, which gives the president wide latitude to deploy those troops. In California and other states, the head of the National Guard is the governor and there are legal limits on how federal troops can be used. The Posse Comitatus Act, passed in 1878 after the end of Reconstruction, largely bars federal troops from being used in civilian law enforcement. The law reflects a tradition dating to the Revolutionary War era that sees military interference in American life as a threat to liberty and democracy. 'We have such a strong tradition that we don't use the military for domestic law enforcement, and it's a characteristic of authoritarian countries to see the military be used in that way,' said Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the UC Berkeley Law School and a constitutional law expert. 'That's never been so in the United States, and many are concerned about the way in which President Trump is acting the way authoritarian rulers do.' Whether the troops deployed to Los Angeles in June amid the federal immigration raids were used for domestic law enforcement in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act is central in the trial underway this week in federal court in San Francisco. If Trump were to send troops to California, Banks said, the only legal lever he could pull would be to declare an insurrection and invoke the Insurrection Act. Unlike in D.C., Trump wouldn't be able to federalize police departments in other parts of the country. There are circumstances where the federal government has put departments under consent decrees — a reform tool for agencies that have engaged in unlawful practices — but in those cases the government alleged specific civil rights violations, said Ed Obayashi, a Northern California sheriff's deputy and legal counsel on policing. 'You are not going to be able to come in and take over because you say crime is rising in a particular place,' he said. Oakland Councilman Ken Houston, a third-generation resident who was elected in 2024, said his city doesn't need the federal government's help with public safety. Oakland has struggled with crime for years, but Houston cited progress. Violent crimes, including homicide, aggravated assault, rape and robbery are down 29% so far this year from the same period in 2024. Property crimes including burglary, motor vehicle theft and larceny also are trending down, according to city data. 'He's going by old numbers and he's making a point,' Houston said of Trump. 'Oakland does not need the National Guard.' Times staff writer Noah Goldberg contributed to this report.

Stephen Colbert cheers on Alex Padilla's bill that would make illegal immigrants citizens
Stephen Colbert cheers on Alex Padilla's bill that would make illegal immigrants citizens

Fox News

time08-08-2025

  • Fox News

Stephen Colbert cheers on Alex Padilla's bill that would make illegal immigrants citizens

Stephen Colbert told Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., that he hopes the senator is successful in getting citizenship for illegal immigrants, in spite of the "brutality and cruelty" of President Donald Trump's administration. Padilla, who was detained in June after rushing a press conference with Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, said that he introduced a bill called "updating the registry" to give illegal immigrants citizenship on "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" on Thursday. "What tends to get lost in the conversation are the millions of people who not just are here in the United States, who have been here in the United States for years if not decades, paying taxes, raising families, otherwise law-abiding, no criminal conviction or history," Padilla said. "They deserve a way to come out of the shadows and take a step towards legal status and so, surprise, surprise, I have a bill. It's called 'Updating the registry,'" he added. "As a registry law that's been on the books for almost a century with a deadline that has been a moving target over the last 100 years, last updated under Republican president Ronald Reagan, that says if you've been here for seven years or longer, you've paid your taxes, no conviction, et cetera, a few other requirements, you should be able to register and move towards legal status. So I introduced a bill to do just that." Colbert, whose show will be canceled in May 2026, said he agreed with Padilla, and asked him if he was hopeful the bill would get through the Senate. "I'm hopeful because it's not just me that has called out this administration for being extreme and overreaching, the public polling, the American people know that this is wrong and an abuse of power when even Steven Scalise from Louisiana, the number two Republican in the house, says there's got to be a better way, I'm hoping and praying that things are shifting just enough," Padilla said. "That would be wonderful," Colbert agreed. "Because I think people who love our country — this is a beautiful country. I love our country, but it breaks my heart to see that the overt policy of the administration is brutality and cruelty." Earlier in the conversation, they discussed how Padilla was detained by police in June after he attempted to interrupt Noem's press conference. "I want to point out, it took three guys to take you down," Colbert said, and followed up by asking Padilla more about what happened. "I identified myself, the whole reason I was there — I'm a senator, I have oversight responsibility," Padilla said. "I had questions hoping for more information and there we saw what happened when I tried to ask the question but as I've been saying every day since that press conference, what happened to me — it's not about me. I think about what this administration is doing to so many people across the country, but especially in California right now with the obsession they have with this mass deportation agenda when the reality is — we know this from ICE statistics, the vast majority of people being arrested, being detained, being deported, are the same people that so many families trust to care for our children."

'They're trying to rig the system': Sen. Padilla says Dems should fight fire with fire
'They're trying to rig the system': Sen. Padilla says Dems should fight fire with fire

USA Today

time03-08-2025

  • USA Today

'They're trying to rig the system': Sen. Padilla says Dems should fight fire with fire

California's Democratic Sen. Alex Padilla said his party should be willing to fight fire with fire, in light of Texas' potential, controversial gerrymandering plans. "If Republicans were confident on their policy agenda, they'd be eager to defend it with the people and to defend it at the ballot box next November," Padilla said in an Aug. 3 interview on NBC's "Meet the Press." "But they know they're in trouble," he continued. "And so they're trying to rig the system to hold on to power." The California senator was referencing Texas Republicans' proposed new map of their state's congressional districts, following President Donald Trump's urging that the GOP find a way to flip as many as five seats in next year's midterm elections. "Just a very simple redrawing, we pick up five seats," Trump told reporters on July 15. Padilla likened Trump's ask of Texas Republicans to his request during his first term in office that a top Georgia official "find 11,780 votes" to put him over the top in the Electoral College for the 2020 election. Redistricting in the middle of the decade, rather than every ten years after new census data is collected, is rare. And the pushback from Democrats across the country has been widespread. Blue state leaders have threatened tit-for-tat responses, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has suggested redrawing his state's map to counteract Texas' efforts. (Newsom faces the challenge of a bipartisan redistricting commission, which oversees California's maps, unlike Texas, where lawmakers dictate the boundaries.) Some California Democrats are wary, warning that a redistricting arms race could spiral and erode trust with voters. In response to those concerns, Padilla told NBC he believes it's appropriate for the Democrat-controlled state to evaluate its options. "The ideal scenario," he said, "is for Texas to stand down. They don't have to do this; they shouldn't do this. But if they were to go forward and deliver Trump his five additional Republicans ... the stakes are simply too high" for Democrats not to respond. Padilla also addressed recent comments from his fellow Democrats about the state of politics and American democracy, including Sen. Cory Booker's call for his party to "have a backbone." "It's time for us to fight. It's time for us to draw lines," Booker said from the Senate floor on July 29. Asked whether Booker's defiant approach was the appropriate stance for Democrats under the Trump administration, Padilla said, "Look, I think the extreme way in which this administration is conducting itself calls for higher and higher profile ways of pushing back." After announcing that she would not be running for California governor in 2026, former Vice President Kamala Harris appeared on CBS's "The Late Show" with Stephen Colbert. In her interview on July 31, Harris told Colbert, "Recently, I made the decision that, for now, I don't want to go back into the system. I think it's broken." Padilla agreed, in part, with Harris' take, saying, "I think the system is under duress." "Democrats are doing our part to try to stand up and push back," he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store