Mar. 3, 2018
BOSTON – Sen. Dean Tran, R-Fitchburg, has spent his entire life breaking boundaries. After spending just two years in his native Vietnam, Mr. Tran and his family set out to escape the communist confines of their home and come to the United States. The destruction caused by the Vietnam War, combined with economic sanctions and Vietnamese government policies, made the country untenable for Mr. Tran’s family. The trip was not easy, though, as they spent two years at a refugee camp in Thailand while they waited for their green cards to be approved. He still remembers the smell of salt water mixed with fumes from the oven that was located on the boat he and his family took to Thailand. “Everything that we’ve achieved really derived from my parents’ commitment to getting their family out of a communist state and doing whatever they could to achieve freedom and provide freedom to their family,” Mr. Tran said. Mr. Tran and his family arrived in America in 1980 with the sponsorship of a Catholic priest in Clinton, the Rev. Anthony Kazarnowicz, whom Mr. Tran still calls a close friend. “He was one of the first people to contact me when I was elected,” he said. Nearly 40 years later, Mr. Tran defied the odds again. Following an unsuccessful bid for state representative in early 2016, he was elected to the Legislature in December to fill the spot vacated by Sen. Jennifer Flanagan, D-Leominster. He’s the first Republican to occupy his seat in more than 20 years and the only Vietnamese-American in the state Senate. “Dean is the meaning of America,” Sen. Ryan Fattman, R-Webster, said. “Somebody who escaped from another place to get to opportunity, freedom, liberty and all the principles for which it stands.” With Mr. Tran’s election, the Senate’s GOP caucus rose to seven in the 40-member chamber, but he doesn’t want to focus on party affiliation. The 42-year-old freshman senator is focused on building a better life for his children in the way that his father did for him. “The passion to get involved in politics came from having a family,” Mr. Tran said. “I wanted to raise a family in a better environment and create a better future for them to grow in. And also, to establish name recognition.” Mr. Tran faced various struggles as he and his family attempted to establish themselves in America. He recalls friends who received better treatment because their names were well-known in the community, and said the environment was hostile for Vietnamese immigrants. He vowed the same difficulties would not hinder his children. “There was a lot of discrimination, prejudice and racism that a lot of people had to face due to the fact that we were just a few years after the war had ended,” Mr. Tran said. “So there was hostility not only to the veterans coming back from the war, but also to people from Vietnam emigrating to the United States as refugees.” In 1986, his family moved to Fitchburg, where he now lives with his wife, Kerry, and four children. After graduating from Brandeis University, he pursued a career in software development. Mr. Tran says his experience managing people on three different continents prepared him well for his position in public service. “My background in the private sector, being able to work with people of various backgrounds, races, ethnicities and socioeconomics allowed me to be able to work with people in politics,” he said. “Because in politics, everyone is different. Everyone has a different background, beliefs and opinions.” He points to his relationship with Senate President Harriette L. Chandler, D-Worcester, as evidence of his ability to collaborate with both sides of the aisle. He was “honored” to cast a recent vote for her to remain Senate President through the end of the legislative session, and said that he gives her a hug whenever he sees her. ″(Mr. Tran’s) lifetime of hard work and determination is inspiring and exemplary of the American dream,” Ms. Chandler said in a statement. “His voice adds to the diversity of experiences across the membership of the Senate.” When Mr. Tran arrived on Beacon Hill in January, Mr. Fattman said Ms. Chandler gave a wonderful tribute to him and his family in the Senate chamber. “It speaks volumes of her character and willingness to extend that olive branch,” Mr. Fattman said. It is not lost on Mr. Tran that the bipartisan cooperation lauded by Gov. Charlie Baker during his State of the Commonwealth address is rare in politics today. “If you look at the politics from our state and the federal level, it’s very different,” he said. “Even though we have a two-party system and one party has supermajority control, we still are able to work in a bipartisan manner.” Among Mr. Tran’s legislative priorities are improving economic development and increasing services for children in his community. He’s working with Ms. Chandler and Sen. Jamie Eldridge, D-Acton, on legislation that would request a feasibility study to make improvements along Route 2 with hopes of increasing commercial growth. The filing deadline has passed for this session, but Mr. Tran and his colleagues are discussing the language of this proposal. As the Senate works through its version of the fiscal 2019 budget in the coming months, Mr. Tran is committed to securing additional school funding and ensuring that the state funds 75 percent of special education tuition costs through the Circuit Breaker program. But beyond legislative accomplishments, Mr. Tran hopes to set an example as the first minority elected to the state Senate in his district. “If someone like myself, who grew up poor, lived in a refugee camp, emigrated from a communist country, and worked hard can become a state senator in the great state of Massachusetts, anyone can achieve their goal,” he said.