The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Victory offers Muslim candidate new platform to oppose Trump

- By Steve Karnowski

President Donald Trump, meet Ilhan Omar.

Just two years ago, the Minnesota Democrat became the first SomaliAmer­ican elected to a state legislatur­e. Now she’s likely to become one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress. And she says one of her top priorities will be resisting the Trump administra­tion, which would forbid her from entering the U.S. if she were attempting to immigrate today.

“I myself would have been part of the travel ban,” Omar said on the campaign trail.

Her victory in Tuesday’s Democratic primary for a House seat from the immigrant-rich Minneapoli­s area depended heavily on support from people who feel persecuted in Trump’s America and voters who empathize with them.

No Republican has won the heavily liberal district since 1962, making the primary the de facto election, though Omar will face first-time Republican candidate Jennifer Zielinski in November.

Winning the seat will position her as a new national voice against administra­tion policies. The seat opened up when Rep. Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, launched a last-minute bid for attorney general after serving six terms.

Omar’s victory over a crowded field marked the latest milestone in the meteoric political rise of a woman who spent her childhood in a Kenyan refugee camp and immigrated to the United States at age 12. She won her seat in the state House in 2016.

On Tuesday, she defeated two more experience­d candidates — former House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher and state Sen. Patricia Torres Ray — as well as another Somali-American.

During the campaign, Omar often addressed the country’s divisions.

“There is a clear and dangerous crossroads to where our country finds itself,” she told a group last month at a coffee shop. “You can see the politics of fear and scarcity that’s led us to the current administra­tion we have.”

Omar was not giving interviews Wednesday, her campaign said.

Supporters cheered on the hijab-wearing candidate when she took the stage Tuesday night to claim victory. She recalled how she was just 8 when her family fled the civil war in Somalia and described what her win would have meant to that 8-year-old girl in the refugee camp.

“Today I still think about her, and I think about the kind of hope and optimism all of those 8-year-olds around the country and world get from seeing your beautiful faces elect and believe in someone like me,” an emotional Omar told the jubilant crowd.

The other Muslim woman who is likely to join Congress in January is former Michigan state Rep. Rashida Tlaib , a Palestinia­n-American who won a Detroit-area Democratic primary last week and is running unopposed in November.

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