mr. eskelsen garcia: and good times. and she ran for state senate in the 1800s as a democrat, defeating the republican, her husband, angus cannon. and that -- yes for my five minutes i just wanted you to note, don't mess with utah women, ok? it is a very cool story, and i thought that i would mention --t because as i talk about as we talk about where we are today, as we talk about breaking, maybe the highest glass ceiling for a woman, and as we move into making big decisions about where we will be in this race, i know that you know, whether you are fighting racial injustice, whether you lgbtq,hting equality for whether you are fighting for the equal rights of women, nothing that we have was given to us. by, not,ught for, sometimes, history. sometimes it is being fought by people sitting amongst us right now, here and now. years after the constitution was signed and women's votes were taken from them, we will now see a woman at the top of a major party's ticket. this is historic. [applause] mr. eskelsen garcia: and we wil