Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

Over 80 Indian-Americans Running For Public Offices For November Elections

IANS, 16 May, 2018 11:52 AM
    Over 220 Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders are running for various offices in more than 30 states.
     
     
    The mid-term elections will take place in the middle of President Donald Trump's term. All 435 seats in the US House of Representatives and 35 of the 100 seats in the US Senate will be contested. About 39 state and territorial governorships and numerous other state and local elections will also be contested.
     
     
    An overwhelming majority of these candidates are running in the election on a Democratic party ticket, and some seeking to enter the elected offices across the country from the Republican party.
     
     
    "Over 80 Indian-Americans are on the ballot this year," Gautam Raghavan, a former White House official, and now leading the recently founded Indian-American Impact Fund said.
     
     
    Raghavan made the announcement at a news conference organised collectively by Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) and leaders from Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) political organisations.
     
     
    "We have an unprecedented number of AAPI candidates. Over 50 that are running in congressional districts all across the country," said CAPAC chair Congresswoman Judy Chu.
     
     
    "To ensure that we have the greatest impact AAPI political organisations will work to support these candidates and to maximize the turnout of the AAPI vote today," Chu said. 
     
     
    Simultaneously, 12 AAPI political organisations for the first time announced launching an online clearinghouse for its political and election activity. This clearinghouse will provide a place online for candidates and voters to learn about opportunities to get involved in campaign activities and to find ways to support one another, Chu said.
     
     
    Of the Indian Americans running for Congress, four of them are seeking re-election: Ami Bera and Ro Khanna from California, Raja Krishnamoorthi from Illinois and Pramila Jayapal from Washington.
     
     
    Prominent among Democrats seeking to enter the Congress this year are Hiral Tipirneni from Arizona, Aruna Miller from Maryland, Saira Rao from Colorado, Aftab Pureval from Ohio, Suraj Patel from New York, and Preston Kulkarni from Texas.  Republican Harry Arora is contesting from a Congressional seat in Pennsylvania.
     
     
    Reflecting on such a large number of Indian Americans running for public offices, Raghavan said that the community has come a long way since six decades ago when Dalip Singh Saund became the first Indian American to be elected to the House of Representatives.
    "But despite how far we've come in those 60 years; in a lot of ways, we find ourselves at a time that is very similar to the time that Congressman Saund lived in," he said.
     
     
    "A time of rising racism, xenophobia and hate violence. A time in which a sitting US Congresswoman who also happens to be the first Indian-American woman elected to Congress is questioned about her citizenship on national television," Raghavan said, asserting that it is time for the community to get off the sidelines and enter the game.
     
     
    Shekar Narasimhan, chair of AAPI Victory Fund called for generating resources to elect as many candidates as possible.
     
     
    "Why we are doing this. We must flip the House in 2018," he said.
     
     
    "Elections continue to be won by the slimmest of margins and ensuring success requires candidates to get the 'margin of victory' votes. With the right investment and cultivation, we can ensure a sustainable majority," he asserted.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Donald Trump Didn't Give XXX-Rated Performance, Says Pornstar He Allegedly Tried To Pay To Keep Quie

    Donald Trump Didn't Give XXX-Rated Performance, Says Pornstar He Allegedly Tried To Pay To Keep Quie
    Pornstar Stormy Daniels had told a US magazine that she had sex with Donald Trump right after his wife, Melania, gave birth in 2006.

    Donald Trump Didn't Give XXX-Rated Performance, Says Pornstar He Allegedly Tried To Pay To Keep Quie

    'Nishan-e-Haider' For Bhagat Singh? Hafiz Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawah Opposes

    Bhagat Singh Memorial Foundation – an organisation working to prove the legendary freedom fighter’s innocence in court - has demanded the country's highest gallantry award ‘Nishan-e-Haider’ for the revolutionary. 

    'Nishan-e-Haider' For Bhagat Singh? Hafiz Saeed’s Jamaat-ud-Dawah Opposes

    Langley RCMP Seek Surrey Man Wanted For Impersonating Police Officer

    Langley RCMP Seek Surrey Man Wanted For Impersonating Police Officer
    Langley RCMP is seeking the public’s assistance to execute an arrest warrant for Bryce TELFORD.

    Langley RCMP Seek Surrey Man Wanted For Impersonating Police Officer

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry
    Premier John Horgan says the relationship between British Columbia and the forest industry has fractured over outdated government policy that hurts communities and threatens many small business contractors.

    B.C. Premier John Horgan Tells Truck Loggers He Wants Reconnect Communities With Forestry

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian
    His biological mother Anasuiya could never have imagined that Niklaus-Samuel Gugger, whom she abandoned in a hospital 48 years ago just after his birth, would be the first Indian to be elected to the Swiss parliament.

    Abandoned At Birth, Indian Grows Up To Become Swiss Parliamentarian

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement
    "There is no case against Hafiz Saeed sahib in Pakistan. Only when there is a case can there be action," the Pakistani prime minister had said in an interview when asked why there was no action against the terrorist.

    US' Strong Retort After Pak PM's ‘No Case Against Hafiz Sahib’ Statement