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Wednesday, November 05
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Indian-origin Democrat Zohran Mamdani wins New York mayoral contest


Mangalore Today News Network

New York, Nov 5, 2025: Democrat Zohran Mamdani scripted history as he won the New York mayoral contest.

Mamdani defeated former governor Andrew Cuomo and Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa to become the city’s first South Asian and Muslim mayor.

Zohran Mamdani


"It is a mandate for change," Zohran Mamdani said after winning the mayoral election. He also added, "We will fight for you; because we are you."

He won the NYC Mayoral election, which witnessed highest turnout in decades, getting 948,202 votes (50.6 per cent), with 83 per cent of the votes in.

Cuomo fetched 776,547 votes (41.3 per cent), while Sliwa got 137,030 votes.

The Indian-origin Democrat has had huge support from the youth and the working class. “Zohran Mamdani is running for Mayor to lower the cost of living for working class New Yorkers,” his campaign had said amid a difficult economic situation in the country.

“The dream of every Muslim is simply to be treated the same as any other New Yorker. And yet for too long, we have been told to ask for less than that and to be satisfied with whatever little we receive. No more,” Mamdani had said earlier in a speech narrating his experiences after 9/11.

Mamdani is the son of popular filmmaker Mira Nair and Columbia University professor Mahmood Mamdani.

With Mamdani’s win, New York City and the US entered a new political and ideological era with the democratic socialist now at the helm of the citadel of capitalism.


Indian-origin Ghazala Hashmi wins Virginia Lieutenant Governor election

India-born American politician Ghazala Hashmi has been elected as Virginia’s Lieutenant Governor, becoming the first Muslim and South Asian American to be elected to the top political post in the state.

Hashmi, 61, a Democrat secured 1,465,634 votes (54.2 per cent), way ahead of her Republican rival John Reid, who secured 1,232,242 votes, with 79 per cent of the votes in.


Ghazala Hashmi

The Virginia State Senator, who emerged victorious on Election Day Tuesday, was among the over 30 Indian-Americans and South Asian candidates running for office for key nationwide positions in the 2025 elections.

Hashmi’s election was among the most-closely watched as she was in the fray for the top state post.

Hashmi is the first Muslim and the first South Asian American to serve in the Virginia Senate.

“As an experienced educator and advocate of inclusive values and social justice, her legislative priorities include public education, voting rights and the preservation of democracy, reproductive freedom, gun violence prevention, the environment, housing and affordable healthcare access,” her official profile said.

Community organisation The Indian American Impact Fund congratulated Hashmi on her historic victory in the General Election for Virginia’s Lieutenant Governor.

As part of its commitment to electing barrier-breaking leaders, Impact said it had invested $175,000 in Hashmi’s campaign to mobilise voters and strengthen representation at every level of government.

Executive Director of the Indian American Impact Fund Chintan Patel described Hashmi’s victory as a landmark moment for the community, Commonwealth and democracy.

“An immigrant, educator and tireless advocate, she has dedicated her life to expanding opportunity and delivering results for working families across Virginia. From reproductive freedom and affordable healthcare to public education and housing equity, Ghazala Hashmi has led on the issues that matter most to Virginians,” Patel said.

Hashmi was first elected to office in November 2019, upsetting the Republican incumbent and delivering the majority to Democrats for the first time in years and shocking the political establishment.

Indian American Impact Fund noted that Hashmi had made history in 2019 with her victory, flipping the Republican-held seat to help Democrats take control of the State Senate.

“Tonight she’s made history again as Virginia’s first South Asian American and Muslim Lieutenant Governor. Impact was proud to support her from the very beginning because we knew what was at stake: protecting our rights, defending our communities from MAGA extremism, and expanding opportunity for all who call Virginia home.” In 2024, Hashmi was named Chair of the Senate Education and Health Committee. As a state Senator, Ghazala has dedicated her efforts to improving the lives of others, focusing on issues of inequity in housing, education, health care, environmental justice and much more.

Hashmi was four years old when she emigrated to the US with her mother and older brother from India, joining her father in Georgia where he was pursuing his PhD in international relations and beginning his university teaching career.

She grew up in that small college town, at a time when public schools were being desegregated, and so she saw firsthand how communities can be built and dialogue promoted through intentional efforts to bridge cultural, racial, and socioeconomic divides, her campaign said.

After graduating as valedictorian of her high school class and receiving multiple full scholarships and fellowships, Hashmi earned a BA with honours from Georgia Southern University and her PhD in American literature from Emory University in Atlanta.

Hashmi and her husband, Azhar, moved as newlyweds to the Richmond area in 1991, and she spent nearly 30 years as a professor, first teaching at the University of Richmond and then at Reynolds Community College.

While at Reynolds, she also served as the Founding Director of the Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL). 



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