About a third of the 81 Muslim-Americans who ran for office in the off-year elections in the U.S. scored electoral victories, according to Muslim-American advocacy groups.
A total of 26 Muslim candidates emerged winners, and so far, this year, 34 Muslim candidates won state and local elections, said a joint press release by Muslim advocacy groups, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), Jetpac, and MPower Change. Among the 34 winners in 2019, 16 are women, said the groups.
“These electoral victories clearly indicate that American Muslims are stepping up and showing their commitment to public service,” said Nihad Awad, the Council’s national executive director.
“American Muslims are running for office in large numbers because more of us are realizing that we have a unique perspective that will help fix massive inequities in healthcare, education, and the criminal legal system,” said Mohammed Missouri, Jetpac’s executive director.
“What do Muslim Americans do during a time of heightened Islamophobia under a xenophobic administration? We run for office and win,” said Linda Sarsour, executive director of MPower Change. Of the 26 Muslim candidates who won, 13 were first-time winners, and the rest were incumbents who were re-elected.
Somali immigrant Safiya Khalid, a 23-year-old Democrat who ran for Lewiston City Council in the state of Maine, won her race by a huge margin despite vicious racist attacks on her campaign. “Community organizers beat Internet trolls,” she told supporters after the victory.
In Virginia, Ghazala Hashmi became the first Muslim woman elected to the state senate, while Abrar Omeish became the first Muslim woman to sit on the school board in Fairfax, an affluent Northern Virginia suburb south of Washington, D.C. Nadia Mohamad, also 23, became the first Muslim woman and first Somali elected to the city council in St. Louis Park, Minn. Chol Majok, a 34-year-old from South Sudan, became the first refugee elected to public office in Syracuse, New York.
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