Maya, a young aspiring politician, fled to Germany from Syria with her father many years ago. She has long since become linguistically and culturally at home in Germany and is involved in a party whose enlightened and humanitarian views she can identify with. She wants to help preserve a good future worth living in and help shape improvements. However, she always seems to run into walls when it comes to asserting herself against other members for party offices. Is it because of her surname or her accent? The topic of "migration" is increasingly becoming a political issue in society. Is that why the party doesn't want her to come up? Maya is not discouraged. She continues to fight. She wants to learn how to give speeches and should take part in a workshop.
The leader of the workshop, the older and influential party member Stahl, behaves in a discriminatory manner towards Maya. He obviously does not tolerate her migration background. He blames people with a refugee background for overburdening communal structures. His prejudices against Maya become known within the party and trigger internal protests against him. To smooth things over, Stahl and Maya are asked to produce posts for social media that show Stahl and Maya in a constructive coaching session. Stahl and Maya slowly gain mutual respect. Mutual antipathy gives way to the first delicate signs of mutual appreciation.