Dayton Daily News

Go back? Omar, squad building strength at home

- By Steve Karnowski and Brian Slodysko

MINNEAPOLI­S — President Donald Trump can tell Rep. Ilhan Omar to “go back” to Somalia all he wants. All indication­s suggest she’s not going anywhere.

Safely entrenched in liberal, urban districts, Omar and most of her fellow “squad” mates of progressiv­e Democrats have been posting impressive fundraisin­g numbers, so far scaring away serious primary challenges and quieting some critics on their home turf. While their leftist policies and uncompromi­sing tactics may roil Democratic leaders and draw Trump’s fire, they’ve only bolstered their standing at home. The squad is poised to be a foil for Trump and a complicati­on for Democratic leaders.

“We are going to continue to be a nightmare to this president because his policies are a nightmare to us,” Omar, the first Somali American to serve in the U.S. House, told the crowd of supporters who gave her a hero’s welcome at the airport Thursday as she returned to her Minneapoli­s district from Washington.

She spent the week as Trump’s top target, after he tweeted last Sunday that lawmakers should “go back” to their countries if they want to criticize the U.S. He was referring to Omar and her fellow congress women Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, Rashida Tlaib of Michigan and Ayanna Pressley of Massachuse­tts — four freshmen women of color known as the “squad.” All four are U. S. citizens, and only Omar was born outside the U.S. Omar hasn’t always been so celebrated at home. Some Democrats were dismayed by remarks she made earlier this year that they considered anti-Semitic. Some believed she was vulnerable to a primary challenge fromher district’s sizable Jewish community. But none has emerged. The three little-known Republican­s who have filed to run against her are given almost no chance of winning in the district that covers the heart of thecity’s large Somali community, aswell as some firstring suburbs. Trump drew only 18% of the vote in 2016.

Omar’s campaign bank account is likely a deterrent for any Democrat. At least $ 1.2 million of the $2.4 million that Omar has raised since 2017 comes from outside her state.

Ocasio-Cortez has amassed $1.4 million, records show. At least $ 1.2 million of the money she has raised since launching her campaign comes from outside her home state, according to the AP’s analysis. Their squadmates have more modest but still respectabl­e bank balances.

 ?? THE NEWYORK TIMES ?? Supporters greet Rep. IlhanOmar in Minneapoli­s on Thursday after a week of attacks by President Trump.
THE NEWYORK TIMES Supporters greet Rep. IlhanOmar in Minneapoli­s on Thursday after a week of attacks by President Trump.

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