2006-09-14
News: First Muslim US Congressperson
I guess I'm just ignorant, I never really thought about how the United States has never had a Muslim in the Senate or House of Representatives.

If he's elected, Keith Ellison would be the first Muslim ever in the House. I'm not quite sure why the article is titled in this fashion, I mean, the guy still has to win, even though it's pretty much a given ...

    CQPolitics.com via Yahoo! News
    Minneapolis Voters Make Ellison Congress' First Muslim Member
    By Libby George
    September 13, 2006

    Democrats in Minnesota's strongly Democratic 5th Congressional District put history into motion by nominating state Rep. Keith Ellison in Tuesday's primary - all but guaranteeing that he will become the first Muslim ever elected to Congress.

    Ellison's virtually certain victory in November also would make him the first African-American to represent Minnesota in the 110th Congress, and one of a small handful of black lawmakers who represent districts with sizable white majorities. The 5th, which includes all of Minneapolis and much of its suburbs, has a population that is about 70 percent non-Hispanic white.

    The winner of the November election will succeed retiring Democratic Rep. Martin Olav Sabo, who never had a close race over his 14-term career. Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry took 71 percent of the 5th District vote in 2004.

    Ellison earned his primary victory in a hard-fought campaign against two other leading contenders - longtime Sabo aide Mike Erlandson, a former state Democratic Party chairman, and former state Sen. Ember Reichgott Junge.

    With all precincts reporting in unofficial returns, Ellison took 41 percent to 31 percent for Erlandson and 21 percent for Junge. Minneapolis City Councilman Paul Ostrow ended the race with 5 percent.

    Business consultant Alan Fine was unopposed to stage the Republicans' longshot bid for the seat. Independence Party candidate Tammy Lee and Green Party member Jay Pond also will contend for the seat.

    Ellison was established as the front-runner for the Democratic nod in May, when he received the official endorsement of the Democrat-Farmer-Labor Party (as the Democrats have long been known in Minnesota). His bid to make racial political history in the state also drew him an endorsement from the Congressional Black Caucus.

    Sabo, though, stood by Erlandson, who chose to pursue the primary bid despite losing the party endorsement vote.

    And Ellison had to recover his footing after some early stumbles. He was stung by news reports about a variety of personal problems, including allegations of unpaid parking tickets, late federal income tax payments and failure to file timely campaign finance reports in other elections. Perhaps most damaging were reports linking him to Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan after his conversion to the religion as a young man.

    But Ellison's charm and progressive politics are what likely pulled him through, experts say. The 43-year-old state lawmaker has been likened to progressive political icon Paul Wellstone - a comparison that can go a long way in a state that is still mourning the late senator, who died in a plane crash late in his 2002 bid for re-election.

    "The margin speaks to the strength of progressives and grass-roots in that district," said Blois Olson, co-publisher of the newsletter Politics in Minnesota. "He's been compared to Paul Wellstone . . . I think it was a factor, and I think the people could relate to that."

    Ellison also pushed hard in the final hours of his campaign, meeting with as many voters as possible to spread a message that included advocating withdrawal of U.S. troops from Iraq, universal health care coverage and support for labor issues.

    Throughout the race, Ellison focused on those subjects, eschewing a race-based campaign, and vigorously seeking face time with as many voters of all backgrounds as possible.

    The tactic clearly worked: more voters showed up for this primary than any other primary in state history. "This is exactly how we planned it," said Ellison campaign spokesman Dave Colling.

    Colling contended the real reason Ellison is able to elicit so much enthusiasm is his willingness to stand up to authority, a trait he said President Bush will soon encounter. "I watched him do it in the state House, and I can't wait to watch him do it in Congress," Colling said.

    Erlandson, who targeted older voters who usually cast the most ballots in primary elections, finished strong in the suburbs. "We just didn't have quite enough juice at the end," said Erlandson campaign spokesman Peter Brickwedde.

    © Congressional Quarterly
posted by Josh @ 3:11 PM  

Josh and Liz are two American kids who got married in August. Liz has lived in Dubai since 2003, Josh since August of 2006.

Follow along in the culture shock of being recently married and (for Josh, at least) recently transplanted to Dubai.


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