If the 2018 midterms taught us anything, it was that #PeopleLikeUs can run for office and win. This year was no different: an unprecedented number of trailblazing New American candidates won their races Tuesday, and progressive ballot measures passed with solid majorities across the country.
Of the 264 candidates we tracked in 2019, 66.67% of first generation Americans who ran for office in the general election won, while 73.68% of second generation Americans who ran in the general election won. Among them were:
- Ghazala Hashmi: The first Muslim woman elected to the Virginia state Senate
- Turan Kayaoglu: A NAL alum and leader in his local Muslim community in Washington and at the university where he teaches
- Safiya Khalid: The first Somali American and hijab-wearing official on Lewiston City Council in Maine
- Chol Majok: The first refugee elected to public office in Syracuse, New York
- Julia Mejia: The first Afro Latina immigrant elected to the Boston City Council
- Nadia Mohamed: The first Muslim woman and Somali American elected to the St. Louis Park City Council in Minnesota
- Abrar Omeish: The first Libyan American ever elected in the United States and one of the first Muslim women to hold elected office in Virginia’s history
- Bhuwan Pyakurel: The first Bhutanese American elected to public office in the United States
- Zahra Roach: The first Muslim woman in Washington state to be elected
- Regina Romero: The first woman and Latina mayor in Tucson, Arizona
Say hello to the New American majority. We aren’t going anywhere!
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