Daily Press (Sunday)

Reelected Virginia state senator faces lawsuit

Losing opponent, others question Hashmi’s residency

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CHESTERFIE­LD — A Virginia state senator who won reelection Nov. 7 is facing a call for an investigat­ion from her opponent and a lawsuit from several neighbors over whether she actually lives in the new district she represents.

Democratic Sen. Ghazala Hashmi defeated Republican challenger Hayden Fisher by more than 13,000 votes. The Richmond Times-Dispatch reports that Fisher seeks an investigat­ion and plans to ask state officials not to certify the results.

Early last week three Chesterfie­ld residents filed a lawsuit alleging Hashmi does not live in the new 15th District. The neighbors are asking for an injunction to block Hashmi’s election.

Under state law, lawmakers must live in the legislativ­e district they represent.

According to county tax records, Hashmi has owned a home in Midlothian since 1999. That home is within the boundaries of the old 10th District that Hashmi represente­d before redistrict­ing was completed.

Her candidate filing paperwork lists an apartment in north Chesterfie­ld within the boundaries of the new 15th District, where she ran for reelection this year.

Ronald Gay, listed in online court records as the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit filed by Hashmi’s neighbors, told the Times-Dispatch he lives around the corner from the home Hashmi and her husband bought in 1999. Gay said he sees her car and her husband’s car parked in the driveway of the house.

“I walk my dog every day between 7:30 and 8 in the morning, and I see both cars then,” he said.

In a statement sent Friday Aaron Mukerjee, an attorney for Hashmi, said she moved into her apartment in north Chesterfie­ld in early 2023. Mukerjee said Hashmi updated her voter registrati­on, car registrati­on and driver’s license to reflect her new residence.

“She was therefore a resident of the 15th Senate District at the time she filed for the office, and she remains a resident of the 15th Senate District to this day,” Mukerjee said. “She has fully complied with Virginia law and we are confident this case will be dismissed.”

When Virginia’s Supreme Court redrew the state’s legislativ­e boundaries in late 2021, dozens of legislator­s were either drawn into districts with other incumbents or drawn out of their districts. Some moved so they could run in new districts, while many incumbents retired.

Other candidates’ residency has also been called into question. To remove candidates or sitting officehold­ers usually requires a prosecutor to file a legal complaint. It would be up to a judge to determine whether Hashmi met the candidacy requiremen­ts.

The state’s Board of Elections will meet Dec. 4 to certify election results.

 ?? STEVE HELBER/AP ?? The Republican opponent of Ghazala Hashmi, a Democrat who won reelection to the Virginia Senate, plans to ask officials to not certify the results until an investigat­ion into her residency is complete.
STEVE HELBER/AP The Republican opponent of Ghazala Hashmi, a Democrat who won reelection to the Virginia Senate, plans to ask officials to not certify the results until an investigat­ion into her residency is complete.

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