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San Jose Councilman Takes Oath of Office With Captain America Shield: ‘I Want to Shine a Ray of Optimism'

"I think it's a symbol of what's positive," Lan Diep said, "in this darkened political landscape."

The newest San Jose councilman, Lan Diep, held a Captain America shield as he was officially sworn into office on Tuesday. Diep is a self-described comic nerd and told NBC Bay Area he takes the job seriously, but takes himself less seriously and wanted to do something fun.

A new San Jose city councilman held a Captain America shield as he was sworn in on Tuesday night, telling NBC Bay Area that the Marvel Comics character "embodies the ideals of America."aid

Lan Diep, a Republican legal aid attorney, received cheers after he said "I do solemnly swear" when the clerk asked if he would defend his oath of office. His final vote of his first meeting? Joining the council in unanimously banning the communist Vietnamese flag from flying in San Jose.

In an interview after the meeting, the proud comic book geek and Houston-born son of Vietnamese refugees said that Captain America stands for the "kinds of things I strive for: equal justice, fair play and democracy."

Diep won a council seat on his second try, after losing in 2015, though the 2016 vote is still being contested. He's been recognized by presidents Barack Obama and George H. W. Bush, after moving to Mississippi to help people affected by the BP oil spill.

Jennifer Gonzalez/ NBC Bay Area
Women’s rights supporters march alongside an estimated 100,000 people during the San Francisco Women’s March. (January 21, 2017)
Jennifer Gonzalez/ NBC Bay Area
An estimated over 100,000 people gathered at the Civic Center for the Women’s March a day after Donald J. Trump’s inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
An estimated 100,000 people gathered at the Civic Center for the Women’s March a day after Donald J. Trump’s inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
Jennifer Gonzalez/ NBC Bay Area
A demonstrator in the Women’s March in San Francisco, estimated to have over 100,000 people, chants, “We want a leader, not an angry tweeter!” (January 21, 2017)
Jennifer Gonzalez/ NBC Bay Area
A supporter encourages all demonstrators of the Women’s March as they rally down Market St. in San Francisco. (January 21, 2017)
Jennifer Gonzalez/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators joined the Women’s March in San Francisco a day after Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
Raquel Dillon/ NBC Bay Area
Fifth grade teacher, Nicole Shigeta, collaborated with her students to make a poster for the Women's March in Albany. (January 21, 2017)
Raquel Dillon/ NBC Bay Area
Young girls like Sicily, Leah and Lili joined the Women's March in Albany. (January 21, 2017)
Lisa Fernandez/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators joined the Women's March in Oakland, several carrying signs expressing their opinion of President Donald Trump. (January 21, 2017)
Lisa Fernandez/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators joined the Women's March in Oakland to protest President Donald Trump. (January 21, 2017)
Lisa Fernandez/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators joined the Women's March in Oakland, several carrying signs expressing their opinion of President Donald Trump. (January 21, 2017)
Lisa Fernandez/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators joined the Women's March in Oakland, several carrying signs expressing their opinion of President Donald Trump. (January 21, 2017)
Raquel Dillon/ NBC Bay Area
Over 100,000 demonstrators gathered peacefully in Oakland the day after Donald Trump's inauguration for the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Raquel Dillon/ NBC Bay Area
In commemoration of Frank Ogawa's service as a councilman and vice mayor in the 1960's, demonstrators placed a "pussy hat" on his statue in Oakland during the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Rebecca Greenway/ NBC Bay Area
'Silence is complicit:' Redwood City rally calls for active citizenship among those in San Mateo County during the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Rebecca Greenway/ NBC Bay Area
'Silence is complicit:' Redwood City rally calls for active citizenship among those in San Mateo County during the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Sara Bueno/ NBC Bay Area
The threat of rain did not deter the crowd that gathered in Redwood City to rally during the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Sara Bueno/ NBC Bay Area
The threat of rain did not deter the crowd that gathered in Redwood City to rally during the Women's March. (January 21, 2017)
Kavin Mistry/ NBC Bay Area
Over 25,000 demonstraters joined the Women’s March in San Francisco a day after Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
Kavin Mistry/ NBC Bay Area
Over 25,000 demonstrators joined the Women’s March in San Francisco a day after Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
Kavin Mistry/ NBC Bay Area
Over 25,000 demonstrators joined the Women’s March in San Francisco a day after Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. (January 21, 2017)
Kavin Mistry/ NBC Bay Area
Over 25,000 demonstrators joined the Women’s March in San Francisco a day after Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration. (January 21, 2017)

Diep came to San Jose in 1999 and graduated from Independence High School, the University of California, San Diego and the University of the Pacific's McGeorge School of Law, according to his campaign website.

Along with his legal work with the Mississippi Center for Justice, Diep has worked as an international broadcaster for Radio Free Asia and the Legal Aid Society in San Jose.

Diep said he brought the iconic Captain America shield to his swearing-in because "I think it's a symbol of what's positive," he said, "in this darkened political landscape."

He did not, however, bring the shield to specifically combat the new president, Donald Trump even though he said in his mind, "Trump is not a real Republican, and some might say that about me."

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"I wasn't trying to protest the president, but it's a reminder of what America aspires to be. In this administration, local government will have more of a role to play in taking care of its citizens," Diep said. "In that way, realizing that this is the landscape I'm stepping into, I wanted to shine a ray of optimism and levity."

Diep said he wants to wait and see if Trump will actually hold true on many of his campaign promises, like banning Muslims from the U.S. and building a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, before he passes judgment.

In fact, Diep was out at San Jose's women's march on Saturday. He also attended Obama's farewell address in Chicago this month.

Two things, among many, have been consistent for the Patriots the past decade: Tom Brady at quarterback and New England in the AFC championship game.

Others have also found the symbolism of Captain America especially poignant as Trump became a force in American politics.

Vishavijit Singh, a Washington-born Sikh software engineer-turned-cartoonist, has been dressing as the cartoon character — complete with blue turban — for the last three or so years to fight racial stereotypes.

Singh, a Democrat, went to Cleveland during the Republican National Convention, dressed in full costume, to continue battling the bigotry that many minority groups have felt with Trump's rise. And Singh was also behind the #SendSikhNotetoTrump during the campaign, NBC News reported.

Fiona Aboud (@fionaaboud
Vishavjit Singh, the "Sikh Captain America" stands with two women and a "Wonder Baby" at the Women's March in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 21, 2017. He wears the Captain American uniform to combat bigotry.

Most recently, Singh attended the Women's March in D.C., and told NBC Bay Area that he got "tons of love and support from women" and many asked him if he, a Sikh man, was safe.

For him, the cartoon outfit has taken on "new urgency." He said he wants to build a bridge with those who supported Trump, because "it shows me the imperative that I have to step out even more," he said in a phone interview on Wednesday.

As for what Diep is doing across the country in San Jose, Singh said it's OK that the councilman is a Republican and wasn't motivated necessarily to fight racism, perse. Diep and Singh had never heard of each other before Wednesday, and were motivated by their own individual pursuits.

Still, Singh mused, the Marvel character is a unifying force of good: "Captain America cuts across the spectrum of all divides."

NBC Bay Area's Ian Cull contributed to this report.

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