Category: Politics

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  • Huldah Momanyi Hiltsley-Kenyan woman wins a congress seat

    Huldah Momanyi Hiltsley-Kenyan woman wins a congress seat

    If Paul Wellstone, the late U.S. senator from Minnesota, is looking down from the heavens, he is smiling and happy to see what became of the young Kenyan woman whose family he saved from deportation decades ago.

    That young woman was Huldah Momanyi Hiltsley, who made history on Tuesday. When voters chose her to represent District 38A in the Minnesota House of Representatives, Hiltsley became the first Kenyan immigrant to win a state assembly seat anywhere in the United States. Hiltsley, who ran on the ticket of Democratic Farmer-Labor (DFL), as the Democratic Party is known in Minnesota, defeated Brad Olson, her Republican opponent, by winning almost 65% of the vote.

    “I stand before you tonight with a heart overflowing with gratitude, love, and a deep sense of responsibility,” Hiltsley said in her acceptance speech, fighting back tears, amid cheers from dozens of supporters who gathered for her election watch party at Oro Lounge in Brooklyn Park. “I want to honor my parents who have been a source of courage and resilience throughout my life. Our immigration story – our journey to this country – shaped my identity and purpose.”

    The Hiltsley’s journey to the state capitol is one of the most remarkable stories of an immigrant’s resilience – one that restores faith in the American dream. It was a long, difficult, and at times painful journey that could have ended before it began, if it weren’t for the last-minute intervention by her community, and a U.S. senator who listened and decided to act.

    ​“Senator Paul Wellstone stood up for us, and his belief in fairness and justice left a lasting impression,” said Hiltsley.

    In 2021, this reporter sat down with Hiltsley at her home in Brooklyn Center as she told her family’s immigration story. Her father, Phillip Momanyi, came to the United States as a student in 1988. His wife Tabitha joined him in 1992, followed in 1995 by 9-year-old Hiltsley and two siblings. The youngest of her siblings was born in the United States.

    For 11 years, Momanyi fought the immigration system to gain legal permanent residency for himself and his family. His efforts were unsuccessful, and the family was ordered to leave the country. With only 48 hours left, a coalition led by an African American church the family attended petitioned Wellstone to intervene. The senator began lobbying for the family, which led to a last-minute court ruling overturning the deportation order. Unfortunately, Wellstone and his wife, Sheila, died in a plane crash in October 2002. He was 58.

    “His intervention kept us here, and that experience taught me that government can truly be a force for good,” Hiltsley said. “We were not Americans who could give him votes, but he helped us just because we are human beings.”

    At the watch party, Hiltsley’s mother, dressed in a sparkling purple skirt and a matching coat, danced to African music with other women. Hiltsley’s father paced around clad in a checkered blue suit with “HULDAH FOR HOUSE” and “HARRIS-WALZ” pins on the left collar of his jacket. When it was clear that their daughter had won, Momanyi became emotional about what could have happened if his family had been deported. Wellstone would have been exceptionally happy to see Hiltsley make history, he said.

    “Senator Wellstone was a very compassionate man,” Momanyi said. “What he and his wife Sheila did for us is the reason we are still here, and we are very grateful.”

    Hiltsley said because she was very young back then, she didn’t understand the magnitude of what the community and Wellstone had done for her family until years later when they became U.S. citizens.

    “I didn’t have to think about, ‘Oh my goodness. I can’t say something because I’m worried about who is around me. I can’t go somewhere because I’m worried about, my immigration status. I can’t apply for a job. I can’t do this. I can’t do that,’” she said. “When you talk about the American dream, that’s where it was born for me as an individual. That’s when I realized that I could do anything.”

    As she grew older, Hiltsley developed a strong desire to serve the community that rallied so hard to help when her family had lost hope. She attended Cooper High School in a Minneapolis suburb coincidentally named New Hope, before heading to Bethel University, where she earned three bachelor’s degrees, and later an MBA. Although she went on to build a successful career as data privacy and protection professional, Hiltsley said her true passion was organizing her community to ensure that the needs of every resident were met.

    One of Hiltsley’s first major leadership roles was serving as the president of Mwanyagetinge, the largest organization of Kenyans in Minnesota. The population of Kenyans in the state is estimated to be around 20,500, according to the research nonprofit, Minnesota Compass.

    Suzie Obwaya, a Kenyan American and businesswoman who runs an assisted living company named Fortunate Homes LLC, said Hiltsley made an immediate impact when she took office at Mwanyagetinge.

    “She’s a visionary thinker,” Obwaya said. “She sees the future.”

    Obwaya said Hiltsley did a lot for the community, like applying for grants and trying to bring awareness to people about what resources were out there for them to tap into. Obwaya said Hiltsley won the election because over the years she had built a reputation of a genuinely friendly and honest person.

    “One thing I like about Huldah, first of all, is her smile,” Obwaya said. “When she smiles at you, you feel the warmth.”

    Hiltsley first entered politics when she ran for a state Senate a seat in District 40 in the 2022 elections. However, following the redistricting mandated according to the 2020 U.S. Census results, she found herself in District 38 with Susan Pha, a councilwoman in the city of Brooklyn Park.

    When she announced in 2023 that she was going to run for the House seat, Hiltsley found herself yet again going against Wynfred Russell, another savvy, trailblazing candidate, who like Pha had extensive experience running a successful election campaign. In 2018, Russell became the first Liberian American, and the first Black person elected to the Brooklyn Park City Council. Instead of seeking re-election in 2022, he opted to run for mayor of the city but lost.

    In April, Hiltsley and Russell went to the DFL convention hoping to win the 60% of delegate votes needed for the party to endorse a candidate. When neither met the threshold, they took the decision to DFL voters in the primaries held on Aug. 13. Hiltsley beat Russell by a mere 50 votes to clinch the nomination.

    Speaking to Mshale on Tuesday, Russell attributed Hiltsley’s victory in the primaries to the experience she gained when she ran against Pha.

    “It was a very close race, but in the end the person who worked the hardest won,” Russell said. “I have participated in a number of elections, but running for the House is a whole other animal. There is a lot of helpful strategies that I think she put into the primary race, which showed that she learned a lot.”

    Ben Hackett is the local DFL branch chair in Brooklyn Park and an early supporter Hiltsley, who endorsed soon after party delegates failed to agree on a candidate to back. Hackett said he got to know Hiltsley well during her run against Pha, who he said was his friend. He decided to back Hiltsley as soon as he heard that she was running for the House seat. What impressed him most about her was that, even after she lost, she never stopped participating in community events.

    “I just saw her everywhere,” Hackett said. “She was helping out, but she wasn’t really asking for something in return when she volunteered with the party.”

    Hackett said Hiltsley continued to participate in local DFL meetings and community events. After getting to know her, Hackett said he concluded that Hiltsley wasn’t out there for her own personal gain but seemed driven by a strong desire to making sure that her neighbors, friends, and community were properly represented and engaged in the political process.

    “That’s the principal reason why I strongly supported Huldah,” he said. “And while I would like to call myself a friend of her opponent [Russell], I just felt that she was a better fit for the district and that’s why I endorsed her.”

    Hackett said he believed that, after Hiltsley assumed her duties at the state capitol, she would continue doing the same community building and networking that won her so many supporters and helped her win the elections.

    “Of course, we will definitely be holding her accountable to make sure that she continues to do that,” he said. “But I believe that she will do that regardless.”

    During her victory speech, Hiltsley promised to continue being available to her constituents and urged them to join hands with her to make District 38A a place where everyone felt valued and empowered. She vowed to fight for safe neighborhoods, high quality education, affordable housing and healthcare that’s accessible to all.

    “This journey is only the beginning,” she said. “The work doesn’t end here.”

  • Tunisia’s incumbent President Saied set to win presidential election

    Tunisia’s incumbent President Saied set to win presidential election

    Tunisia’s incumbent President Kais Saied is set to win the country’s presidential election with 89.2% support despite a low turnout, according to exit polls broadcast on national television Sunday, October 6, after polls closed.

    Saied, 66, is expected to win by a landslide, routing his challengers − imprisoned rival Ayachi Zammel, who was set to collect 6.9% of the vote, and Zouhair Maghzaoui, with 3.9%, said independent polling group Sigma Conseil.

    Three years after Saied staged a sweeping power grab, rights groups fear re-election will only further entrench his rule in the country, the only democracy to emerge from the Arab Spring uprisings.

    With the ouster of longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in 2011, Tunisia prided itself on being the birthplace of those regional revolts against authoritarianism. Yet the North African country’s path changed dramatically soon after Saied’s election in 2019.

    The Tunisian electoral board, ISIE, has said about 9.7 million people were eligible to vote, in a country whose population is around 12 million. Only 27.7% of voters turned out to cast their ballots, it said. Over 58% were men, and 65% aged between 36 and 60. ISIE had barred 14 candidates from joining the race, citing insufficient endorsements, among other technicalities.

    Speaking at his campaign’s office in the capital, Saied warned of “foreign interference” and pledged to “build our country and we will rid it of the corrupt and conspirators.” “The results announced by the exit polls are very close to reality,” he told national television. “We will wait for the official results.” The board is set to announce the preliminary election results on Monday.

    ‘Weak legitimacy’

    This year’s turnout figure compared to 45% in 2019 and is the lowest the country has recorded in a presidential vote since its 2011 revolution.

    Saied cast his vote alongside his wife in the affluent Ennasr neighborhood, north of Tunis, in the morning.Shortly after the exit polls were announced, hundreds of supporters took to the street celebrating his expected win.

    Saied’s 2021 power grab saw him rewrite the constitution and crackdown on dissent, sparking criticism at home and abroad.

    New York-based Human Rights Watch has said more than “170 people are detained in Tunisia on political grounds or for exercising their fundamental rights.” His top challenger, Zammel, currently faces more than 14 years in prison, accused of having forged endorsement signatures to enable him to stand in the election.

    Other jailed figures include Rached Ghannouchi, head of the Islamist-inspired opposition party Ennahdha, which dominated political life after the revolution. Also detained is Abir Moussi, head of the Free Destourian Party, which critics accuse of wanting to bring back the regime that was ousted in 2011.

  • Israel strikes Lebanon, hitting Beirut suburbs and the north

    Israel strikes Lebanon, hitting Beirut suburbs and the north

    Israel expanded its bombardment in Lebanon on Saturday (October 5, 2024), hitting Beirut’s southern suburbs with 12 airstrikes and striking a Palestinian refugee camp deep in northern Lebanon for the first time.

    The attack on the Beddawi refugee camp near the northern city of Tripoli killed an official with Hamas’s military wing, along with his wife and two young daughters, the Palesitnian militant group said in a statement. Tripoli is much farther north than the majority of Israel’s strikes, which have been concentrated in southern Lebanon and Beirut.

    The attack on the Beddawi refugee camp near the northern city of Tripoli killed an official with Hamas’s military wing, along with his wife and two young daughters, the Palesitnian militant group said in a statement. Tripoli is much farther north than the majority of Israel’s strikes, which have been concentrated in southern Lebanon and Beirut.

    Israel has killed several Hamas officials in Lebanon since the Israel-Hamas war began in October last year, in addition to most of the top leadership of Hezbollah.

    At least six people were killed in more than a dozen Israeli airstrikes overnight and into Saturday, according to National News Agency, Lebanon’s official news agency.

    The Israeli military said special forces were carrying out targeted ground raids against Hezbollah infrastructure in southern Lebanon, destroying missiles, launchpads, watchtowers and weapons storage facilities. The military said troops also dismantled tunnel shafts that Hezbollah used to approach the Israeli border.

    Some 1,400 Lebanese, including Hezbollah fighters and civilians, have been killed and some 1.2 million driven from their homes since Israel escalated its strikes in late September aiming to cripple Hezbollah and push it away from the countries’ shared border. On Tuesday, Israel launched what it called a limited ground operation into southern Lebanon. Nine Israeli troops have been killed in close fighting in the area in the past few days, the military said.

    Nearly 375,000 people have crossed from Lebanon into Syria fleeing Israeli strikes in less than two weeks, according to a Lebanese government committee. Associated Press journalists saw thousands of people continuing to cross the Masnaa Border Crossing on foot even after Israeli airstrikes left huge craters in the road leading up to it on Thursday.

    Also on Saturday, Palestinian medical officials say Israeli strikes in northern and central Gaza early Saturday have killed at least 9 people, including two children.

    One strike hit a group of people in the northern town of Beit Hanoun, killing at least five people, including two children, according to the Health Ministry’s Ambulance and Emergency service.

    Another strike hit a house in the northern part of the Nuseirat refugee camp, killing at least four people, the Awda hospital said. The strike also left a number of people wounded, it said.

    The Israeli military did not have any immediate comment on the strikes, but it has long accused Hamas of operating from within civilian areas.

    The Israeli military warned Palestinians to evacuate along the strategic Netzarim corridor in central Gaza, which was at the heart of obstacles to a ceasefire deal earlier this summer. The military told people in parts of the Nuseirat and Bureij refugee camps to evacuate to Muwasi, an area along Gaza’s shore the military has designated a humanitarian zone.

    It’s unclear how many Palestinians are currently living in the areas ordered evacuated, parts of which were evacuated previously.

    Almost 42,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza during the nearly year-long war, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry, which does not differentiate between civilian and militant deaths.

  • Cook Political Report shifts Montana Senate race to GOP

    Cook Political Report shifts Montana Senate race to GOP

    The nonpartisan Cook Political Report shifted Montana’s pivotal Senate race from “toss-up” to “lean Republican,” signifying the GOP is a favorite to win in the Treasure State.

    Sen. Jon Tester, Montana Democrat, and his Republican opponent, Tim Sheehy, are locked in a tight race that Republicans and Democrats see as the key to power in the upper chamber. 

    The change comes after Mr. Tester began this election cycle as the favorite. Mr. Sheehy’s ability to consolidate voters on the side of former President Donald Trump, who is wildly popular in the state, shows the political winds moving against the three-term incumbent. 

    The nonpartisan prognosticating group made the move with less than two months before Election Day, giving Republicans a shot in the arm in the process 

    “Today we are making a major shift — moving the Montana Senate race from Toss Up to Lean Republican,” the Cook Political Report’s Jessica Taylor wrote. “This means that Republicans are now an even heavier favorite to win back control of the Senate, regardless of the result at the top of the ticket.”

    Republicans need to flip only two seats in order to win back the majority that has eluded them for four years. The West Virginia seat currently occupied by retiring Sen. Joe Manchin (I-W.Va.) is a virtual certainty to go to the GOP, with Gov. Jim Justice (R) is in line to replace him. 

    That leaves Republicans needing one seat, with Montana serving as their best chance.

    According to a recent AARP poll, Sheehy leads the three-term incumbent by 6 percentage points. He also clears the all-important 50 percent threshold in the survey. 

    The Senate GOP campaign arm also told members at a luncheon earlier this week that internal polling shows Sheehy leading by 4 percentage points. 

    Senate Republicans are also hopeful Bernie Moreno will defeat incumbent Sen. Sherrod Brown (D) in Ohio, but that race is widely considered a jump ball. 

    The Cook Political Report rates both Ohio and Michigan — where Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.) and former Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) are running to replace Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D) — as toss-up races. 

    Contests in Pennsylvania, Nevada, Wisconsin and Arizona are all rated “lean Democrat.”

  • Is the Harris Honeymoon Over?

    Is the Harris Honeymoon Over?

    After weeks of glowing reviews and surging support, recent polls suggest that excitement surrounding Kamala Harris is beginning to plateau. A weekend NY Times/Siena College survey showed Donald Trump with a 1-point lead in the national polls, narrowing Harris’ 1.2-point lead in the RCP Average.

    The September NY Times poll is one of few surveys to show Trump with a national lead since Harris cemented herself atop the Democratic ticket over six weeks ago. Harris has enjoyed an unprecedented rise in popularity, with Democratic officials and voters alike rallying around her in a shocking show of unity for an oft-splintered party.

    Harris has gained nearly five points on Trump since her pedal-to-the-metal campaign began on July 21 but may be losing steam as the race heads into its final stretch. One issue voters have with Harris, surveys suggest, is that they simply do not know enough about the vice president.

    Three in ten (28%) Americans say they “feel like they need to learn more about” Harris, compared to just 9% of Americans who feel the same about Trump. Of those voters who said they need to learn more about Harris, 66% said they need to learn more about her policies and plans specifically.

    Harris has been criticized for her caginess – the Democratic candidate has only made herself available to the press once, in an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash, when her running mate Tim Walz was by her side. The vice president rarely addresses the country off-script, compared to her competitor, world-class spit-baller Donald Trump.

    In an effort to make her policy stances more explicit, the Harris campaign this weekend unveiled an “Issues” tab on KamalaHarris.com. The page lays out her economic agenda, her plan to secure reproductive rights, her foreign policy goals, and more. There are some concrete policy proposals – like voting rights acts and tax cuts – but much of the information builds on Harris’ history of painting in broad strokes.

    Four separate times, the page links to information about “Trump’s Project 2025 Agenda,” the conservative wish list for a second Trump term that continues to cause the former president a headache. The 900-page document proposes, among other things, disbanding the Departments of Commerce and Education, criminalizing pornography, and shredding LGBTQ+ protections. Three-quarters of likely voters said they had heard about Project 2025, and 63% said they oppose it, according to the NY Times poll.

    Besides proving she has a clear vision for the future, Harris also needs to prove she can offer the one thing voters most want: change. Virtually all voters (95%) said the next president should represent a change from Biden, and 61% of those respondents said it should be a “major change.”

    Most Americans (60%) believe the country is headed in the wrong direction, so it is natural voters are looking for a marked change in leadership. Harris faces an obvious hurdle here, however: only 25% of voters believe Harris represents that change, while 53% of voters feel that Trump would represent a major change from the Biden presidency.

    Harris is hoping to strike the right balance between key engineer of the Biden administration’s most popular achievements and distant relative of its most disappointing failures. Trump, meanwhile, is trying to paint Harris as deeply intertwined with Biden’s unpopular economic and border policies (or lack thereof).

    The Trump campaign has dubbed Harris the “border czar,” a problem for Harris in that immigration is among the top three most important issues to voters this November, following only the economy and abortion. Trump and his team are also blaming Harris for the cost-of-living crisis and high inflation. Working in Trump’s favor is the fact that voters trust him to handle the border (53%-43%) and the economy (55%-42%) over Harris. 

    Harris, on the other hand, has the advantage on issues such as abortion (54%-39%) and democracy (50%-45%), the second and fourth most frequently cited “important issues” for Americans. When one puts all the cross-tabs together, the NY Times poll may seem like just another snapshot showing how tight the race is. 

    Yet for Harris, the recent survey may be a darker herald. Democrats hoped that Harris would be their knight in shining armor, come to turn the race on its head and slay Trump once and for all. It seemed, at least for a moment, that the vice president might be able to coast to victory without any real obstacles. But now that the dust has settled on the rearranged battleground, polls suggest that Democrats might still have an uphill fight.