Marin Independent Journal

Indian Americans conflicted on Haley, Ramaswamy

- By Jazmine Ulloa

Suresh Reddy, a centrist Democrat and city council member, is watching the Republican presidenti­al primary with a mix of pride and disappoint­ment.

When Reddy and his wife, Chandra Gangareddy, immigrants from southern India, settled in the Des Moines suburbs in September 2004, they could count the number of Indian American families on one hand. Only one Indian American had ever served in Congress at the time, and none had dared to mount a bid for the White House.

Now, for the first time in the nation's history, two Indian Americans — Nikki Haley and Vivek Ramaswamy — are serious presidenti­al contenders who regularly invoke their parents' immigrant roots. But their deeply conservati­ve views, on display as they seek the Republican nomination, make it difficult for Reddy to fully celebrate the moment, he said.

“I'm really proud,” he said. “I just wish they had a better message.”

That disconnect, reflected in interviews with two dozen Indian American voters, donors and elected officials from across the political spectrum — in the early voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina and across the country — may complicate the GOP's efforts to appeal to the small but influentia­l Indian American electorate.

Indian Americans now make up about 2.1 million, or roughly 16%, of the estimated 13.4 million Asian Americans who are eligible to vote, the third-largest population of Asian origin behind Chinese and Filipino Americans, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of the 2021 American Community Survey. Indian Americans also have tended to lean more Democratic than any other Asian American subgroups, according to Pew.

Though a small slice of the overall electorate, the demographi­c has become one of the fastest-growing constituen­cies, and is large enough to make a difference at the margins in swing states and in purple suburbs, including in Florida, Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Nevada.

Debate over the prominence of Haley and Ramaswamy is playing out in Indian American homes and places of worship in Des Moines and beyond. In interviews, many described their rise as a political triumph at a time when Indian Americans have become more visible in fields beyond medicine, tech and engineerin­g.

Venu Rao, a Democrat and retired engineer and program manager in Hollis, New Hampshire, said Haley and Ramaswamy captured the ideologica­l diversity among South Asian Americans, even if he doesn't agree with their positions.

“I am glad that we have a choice,” Rao said.

But many of those interviewe­d also expressed frustratio­n and dismay over the candidates' hard-line positions on issues like race, identity and immigratio­n. Some worried Ramaswamy's pledges to dismantle agencies like the Education Department would destroy the same institutio­ns that had been crucial to Indian American success and upward mobility.

Others said they appreciate­d Haley's attempts to strike a more centerrigh­t tone on some topics like abortion and climate change but indicated concern about what they described as her tepid pushback against former President Donald Trump and his 2020 election lies.

“It can be really easy to see this as a win and be like, `Oh my god — look there, those are two brown faces on national TV. That's amazing,'” said Nikhil Vootkur, 20, a student at Tufts University in Boston. But, “the diaspora, it has matured, and when a diaspora matures, you have a lot of ideologica­l cleavages.”

Ramaswamy, 38, a political newcomer and millionair­e entreprene­ur from Cincinnati, Ohio, uses his Hindu faith to connect with Christian voters and expresses gratitude that his parents immigrated from the southweste­rn coast of India to the “greatest nation on Earth.”

Haley, 51, a former South Carolina governor and United Nations ambassador from Bamberg, South Carolina, has written and spoken extensivel­y about her experience as the daughter of Sikh immigrants from northern India, including the pain of watching her father, who wears a turban, endure racism and discrimina­tion.

Ramaswamy, who is running in the mold of Trump, has made a concerted effort to appeal to Indian Americans in the primary. He has made several appearance­s at the Hindu Temple and Cultural Center of Iowa, where many patrons have met his parents, and he has drawn the independen­t support of its Hindu priest, Khimanand Upreti, who in an interview described Ramaswamy as “very fresh and clean” and without Trump's controvers­ies.

On the trail, Haley has

talked less about her identity and often describes her immigrant family in general terms. But in a response to a voter question at a town hall in Hampton, New Hampshire, on Thursday night, she explained how her father's experience with prejudice helped her connect with a hurting community and persuade state lawmakers to take down the Confederat­e battle flag at the South Carolina State House after a white supremacis­t shot and killed nine Black parishione­rs in Charleston. She also used her parents' immigrant background to tear into President Joe Biden's decision to provide temporary protected status and work permits for Venezuelan migrants.

“My mom would always say if you don't follow the laws to get into this country, you won't follow the laws when you are in this country,” she said.

At their home in Waukee, west of Des Moines, Nishant Kumar and Smita Nishant, who immigrated from New Delhi and Mumbai some two decades ago, and their daughter, Anika Yadav, 17, said the 2024 Iowa caucuses would be the first election they would all be able to participat­e in. The Nishants

have only recently obtained citizenshi­p, and Yadav will be old enough to vote in the next presidenti­al election.

The family first became politicall­y engaged when Barack Obama ran for president in 2008 — and would have backed Democrats in the past few elections if they could have voted. But as they weigh the 2024 presidenti­al contenders, they have found Ramaswamy smart and refreshing, they said.

They have seen less of Haley, but Yadav says she likes Haley's experience on foreign policy and the way she holds herself on the national stage, even if she has not made her Indian American identity central to her campaign.

“I think a lot of women, specifical­ly young women, are leaning toward Nikki Haley — even young women who are Democrats,” she said.

Still, some Indian American Democratic-leaning voters and prominent Indian American Democrats expressed concern or sadness over Ramaswamy's and Haley's approaches to issues of race and identity, saying they fed into “model minority” stereotype­s and carried dog whistles that minimized or diminished the specific systematic racism faced by Black Americans.

Both, when discussing their life story, tend to emphasize their successes as evidence of racial and ethnic progress in the United States. Both promote hardline immigratio­n measures and denounce race-conscious policies such as affirmativ­e action in school admissions.

Ramaswamy in particular has generated criticism for suggesting white supremacy was an exaggerate­d “boogeyman” and for pledging to end birthright citizenshi­p for the children of immigrants in the country without legal permission. Haley has said she opposes birthright citizenshi­p for people who have illegally entered the country.

Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., criticized their approach on immigratio­n and faulted them for ignoring the history of Asian exclusion in the nation's immigratio­n laws. The work of Indian and Black leaders during the civil rights movement helped open the pathways to migration and citizenshi­p for Indian families to enter the United States, he said.

“Their story about the Indian American experience will not fully connect because it has so many omissions,” Khanna said.

But Bhavna Vasudeva, a longtime friend of Haley's in Columbia, South Carolina, argued that Haley's Republican values held real appeal for second-generation Indian Americans, adding that her approach to her family's racial struggles exhibited a strong sense of “Chardi Kala,” an expression that for Punjabi and Sikh Indians and Indian Americans has become synonymous with “resilience” and a “positive attitude” in the face of fear or pain.

“You can't tell anyone who is a brown woman about racism and discrimina­tion,” Vasudeva, a donor to Haley's campaign, said. “We have faced it all with our heads high and crown straight.”

 ?? MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley speak during the Republican presidenti­al primary debate last month in Milwaukee.
MORRY GASH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley speak during the Republican presidenti­al primary debate last month in Milwaukee.

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