Oman Daily Observer

Indian-Americans in Congress take oath

All 5 are Democrats and 3 of them — Harris, Bera and Representa­tive Ro Khanna — are from California

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WASHINGTON: Sealing a historic breakthrou­gh for Indian-Americans, five were sworn-in on Tuesday as members of the US Congress — one of them, Kamala Harris ( pictured), becoming the first to become a Senator.

Ami Bera, who was the only IndianAmer­ican in the 435-member House of Representa­tives and re-elected in the November elections, was joined by the four others, increasing the IndianAmer­ican contingent to five members in the Congress.

All five are Democrats and three of them — Harris, Bera and Representa­tive Ro Khanna — are from California. The other two Representa­tives are Raja Krishnamoo­rthi from Illinois and Pramila Jayapal from Washington state.

Harris, whose mother was from Chennai and father from Jamaica, has a dual identity as both an IndianAmer­ican and an African-American. Vice President Joseph Biden administer­ed her the oath of office which she swore on a Bible copy held by her husband Doug Emhoff.

Afterwards her family and friends gathered around the couple in celebratio­n. Two of them were dressed in saris, although Harris wore a two- piece western outfit in blue.

In 1956, Democrat Dalip Singh Saund became the first IndianAmer­ican elected to Congress. Fortyeight years later, Republican Piyush Bobby Jindal was elected to the House in 2004 and re-elected in 2006. But in 2007 he was elected governor of Louisiana and left Congress. After a five-year gap for Indian-Americans, Bera was elected to Congress in 2012.

Republican­s have the majority in both chambers. In the House of Representa­tives, they have 241 seats to Democrats’ 194 and Republican­s control the Senate with 52 seats to the Democrats’ 46 with two Independen­ts allied with them.

The opening of the new session of Congress was overshadow­ed by the Republican Representa­tives’ decision on Monday to restrict the independen­ce of the ethics monitors.

Faced with a firestorm of criticism led by their own party’s President-elect Donald Trump, they backed down on Tuesday and agreed to not make any changes to the Office of Congressio­nal Ethics, which was set up in 2008 following corruption scandals that ended with three members of Congress ending in jail.

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