logo
Minneapolis Democratic socialist Omar Fateh vows to protect illegal immigrants from 'hostile' Trump admin

Minneapolis Democratic socialist Omar Fateh vows to protect illegal immigrants from 'hostile' Trump admin

Fox News2 days ago
Democratic socialist and Minneapolis mayoral hopeful Omar Fateh says his first priority in office would be protecting illegal immigrants from President Donald Trump's "hostile federal government."
Fateh made the statement during an interview with KARE 11 News in Minnesota, doubling down on his identity as a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, but denying his policies are "radical."
"Day one, if you were elected, what would be some of your top two or three priorities for the city?" the reporter asked in an interview aired Friday.
"The first I would say would be a hostile federal government, with not only Donald Trump in office, but he essentially has a trifecta with both chambers of Congress and the Supreme Court. A lot of our neighbors, especially our undocumented residents are very concerned," Fateh responded.
The candidate went on to say public safety would be his second priority, but he declined to endorse the Democratic Socialist platform of abolishing the police entirely.
"That's not going to happen, absolutely," Fateh said of abolition. "What we envision is a public safety system that works for everyone, and that means we have an accountable police force and a police force that is an important part of our public safety system, but making sure that when we call 911 we get an appropriate response."
Fateh argued that half of 911 calls in Minneapolis "don't need to be responded to with armed officers." He argued funding should be directed toward social workers and others who can respond to such calls instead.
Fateh secured the endorsement of the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, the name for the Democratic Party in Minnesota, in July. The party endorsed him over incumbent Mayor Jacob Frey, also a Democrat. Frey is running for a third term and has decided to stay in the race.
Some have dubbed Fateh the "Mamdani of Minneapolis," referencing New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. Both are the children of immigrants, with Fateh hailing from Somalia and Mamdani from Uganda.
Fateh has previously pledged that, if elected mayor, he will raise city's minimum wage, increase the supply of affordable housing, and combat what he calls police violence. Similar to Mamdani, Fateh calls for replacing some of the police department's duties with community-led alternatives. He also wants to issue legal IDs to undocumented immigrants.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Newsom calls for special November election to block Trump from 'rigging' 2026 midterms
Newsom calls for special November election to block Trump from 'rigging' 2026 midterms

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Newsom calls for special November election to block Trump from 'rigging' 2026 midterms

Gov. Gavin Newsom, Democratic lawmakers and their allies on Thursday launched a special-election campaign to ask California voters to approve new congressional districts to decrease the size of the state's Republican delegation — a move that could determine control of Congress next year and stymie President Trump's agenda. The effort is a response to GOP-led states, notably Texas, attempting to redraw their congressional maps to decrease Democratic ranks in the narrowly-divided U.S. House of Representatives at Trump's behest. Newsom, speaking to a fired-up partisan crowd at the Japanese American National Museum in downtown Los Angeles, said the effort by Republicans represented a desperate effort by a failed president to hold on to power by keeping Congress under Republican control. "He doesn't play by a different set of rules. He doesn't believe in the rules," Newsom said. "And as a consequence, we need to disabuse ourselves of the way things have been done. It's not good enough to just hold hands, have a candlelight vigil and talk about the way the world should be. We have got to recognize the cards that have been dealt, and we have got to meet fire with fire." The governor was joined by Sens. Alex Padilla and Adam Schiff; Rep. Pete Aguilar, (D-San Bernardino), the chair of the House Democratic Caucus, and union leaders essential to providing the funding and volunteers to convince Californians to vote for the "Election Rigging Response Act." The proposed California ballot measure would temporarily toss out the congressional districts enacted by the state's voter-approved, independent redistricting commission. "Our union stands in full support of this ballot initiative. We are ready to do whatever it takes to stop this power grab and fight back against any and all attacks on our democracy, on our students and on public education," said Erica Jones, the secretary treasurer of the California Teachers Assn., which represents 310,000 public school teachers. She said school children have suffered because of the Trump administration's immigration raids, as well as cuts to healthcare funding, after school programs and teacher trainings. "Our students deserve better," she said. "The majority of Americans are not with him on these vicious attacks. So what does Trump want to do? Rig the next election and steal our right to fair representation? He wants to stack the deck to keep slashing public services to pad the pockets of his billionaire donors." Outside the political rally, Border Patrol agents gathered and arrested at least one person. Newsom told the crowd inside that he doubted it was a coincidence. Supporters of the independent commission that currently draws California's congressional maps criticized Democrats' efforts to conduct a highly unusual mid-decade redistricting plan. For Newsom's plant to work, the Democratic-led state Legislature must vote in favor of placing the measure on the ballot in a special election in November, and then the final decision will be up to California voters. "Two wrongs do not make a right, and California shouldn't stoop to the same tactics as Texas. Instead, we should push other states to adopt our independent, non-partisan commission model across the country," said Amy Thoma, spokesperson for the Voters First Coalition, which includes Charles Munger Jr., the son of a billionaire who bankrolled the ballot measure that created the independent commission. Munger will vigorously oppose any proposal to circumvent the independent commission, she said. Since voters approved independent congressional redistricting in 2010, California's districts have been drawn once per decade, following the U.S. Census, by a panel split between registered Democrats, registered Republicans and voters without a party preference. The commission is not allowed to consider the partisan makeup of the districts, nor protecting incumbents, but instead looks at "communities of interest," logical geographical boundaries and the Voting Rights Act. The current map was drawn in 2021 and went into effect for the 2022 election. Newsom is pushing to suspend those district lines and put a new map tailored to favor Democrats in front of voters on Nov. 4. That plan, he has said, would have a "trigger," meaning a redrawn map would not take effect unless Texas or another GOP-led state moved forward with its own. Sara Sadhwani, who served on the redistricting commission that approved the current congressional district boundaries, said that while she is deeply proud of the work she and her colleagues completed, she approved of Newsom's effort to temporarily put the commission's work aside because of the unprecedented threats to American democracy. "These are extraordinary times, and extraordinary times call for extraordinary measures," said Sadhwani, citing the immigration raids, the encouragement of political violence and the use of National Guard troops in American cities. "And if that wasn't enough, we are watching executive overreach that no doubt is making our founding fathers turn in their graves, and we have to take action. These are the hallmarks of a democracy in peril." If voters approved the ballot measure, the new maps would be in effect until the independent commission redraws the congressional boundaries in 2031. To meet Newsom's ambitious deadline, the state Legislature would need to pass the ballot language by a two-thirds majority and send it to Newsom's desk by Aug. 22. The governor's office and legislative leaders are confident in their ability to meet this threshold in the state Assembly and state Senate, where Democrats have a supermajority. Newsom first mentioned the idea in mid July, meaning the whole process could be done in about five weeks. Generally, redrawing the state's electoral lines and certifying a measure to appear before voters on the ballot are processes that take months, if not more than a year. Trump's prodding of Texas Republicans to redraw their congressional maps to create five new GOP seats has kicked off redistricting battles across the nation. That includes Florida, Ohio, Indiana and Missouri, where Republicans control the statehouse, and New York, Maryland, Illinois, New Jersey, Oregon and Washington, where Democrats are in power. Democratic lawmakers in Texas fled the state to block the Republican-led legislature from approving a new map that would gerrymander congressional districts to favor of the GOP. The Democrats maneuver worked, since it prevented the legislature from have a quorum necessary to approve the measure. A second special session is expected to begin Friday. The absent lawmakers are facing threats of fines, civil arrest warrants and calls for being removed from office; Texas Gov. Greg Abbott has vowed to call repeated special sessions until the map is approved. In California, the gerrymandering plan taking shape behind closed doors would increase the Democratic Party's dominance in the state by making five House districts more favorable to Democrats, according to a draft map reviewed by The Times. Those changes could reduce by more than half the number of Republicans representing California in Congress. The state has the nation's largest congressional delegation, with 52 members. Nine are Republicans. A Northern California district represented by Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale) could shift to the south, shedding rural, conservative voters near the Oregon border and picking up left-leaning cities in Sonoma County. Sacramento-area Rep. Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) would see his district shift toward the bluer center of the city. The plan would also add more Democrats to the Central Valley district represented by Rep. David Valadao (R-Hanford), who has been a perennial target for Democrats. Southern California would see some of the biggest changes: Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Bonsall) would see his safely Republican district in San Diego County become more purple through the addition of liberal Palm Springs. And Reps. Young Kim (R-Anaheim Hills) and Ken Calvert (R-Corona) would be drawn into the same district, which could force the lawmakers to run against each other. The plan would also shore up Democrats who represent swing districts, such as Reps. Dave Min (D-Irvine) and Derek Tran (D-Orange). It could also add another district in southeast Los Angeles County, in the area that elected the first Latino member of Congress from California in modern history. A similar seat was eliminated during the 2021 redistricting. Times staff writer Taryn Luna contributed to this report from Sacramento. Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week. This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times. Solve the daily Crossword

Chicago voters stuck with ‘America's Worst Mayor' Brandon Johnson send urgent warning to NYC about Zohran Mamdani
Chicago voters stuck with ‘America's Worst Mayor' Brandon Johnson send urgent warning to NYC about Zohran Mamdani

New York Post

time17 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Chicago voters stuck with ‘America's Worst Mayor' Brandon Johnson send urgent warning to NYC about Zohran Mamdani

Voters in Chicago who regret supporting embattled far-left Mayor Brandon Johnson have a stark warning for New Yorkers considering backing socialist Zohran Mamdani to lead the city: Don't make the same mistake. Johnson, dubbed 'America's worst mayor' by the Wall Street Journal editorial board, has drawn comparisons to Mamdani for their shared progressive stances — which have been playing out disastrously in the Windy City. 'What I would say to New Yorkers is do your homework. You have to know who you are supporting, who you are voting for, so people of New York don't walk around feeling the way I do,' said Cata Truss, a Johnson voter and campaigner turned vocal critic. 'I have buyer's remorse in a way that I've never had before,' Truss, 59, told The Post this week. 'Don't be me,' she added. 'Do the research, follow the money. Who is donating to his campaign? Who got him elected? That will be determining where people ought to vote.' 4 Cata Truss, 59, a former Johnson voter and campaigner turned vocal critic, said she has 'buyer's remorse' over her vote, and urged New Yorkers not to make the same mistake. LP Media Johnson rose to the mayor's office in 2023, elbowing his disastrous Democratic predecessor Lori Lightfoot out of the primary and ultimately defeating centrist Paul Vallas in a two-man runoff. His ascent, much like Mamdani's as the Democratic mayoral nominee, was given a major lift by minority and young activist voters, lured in by his adherence to left-wing doctrine, including a 2020 resolution Johnson introduced as Cook County Commissioner that would have defunded the police, a position he later sprinted away from. Since becoming mayor, Johnson's approval rating has hovered around the high-20s, thanks in part to Chicago spending more than $600 million to address some 50,000 illegal immigrants who have made their way to the city in recent years. 4 Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani is leading in the latest NYC mayoral poll by 19 points. Stephen Yang for the New York Post 'I'm anti-Brandon Johnson because I've seen what he's done to this city. All these resources he's used to take care of illegal citizens is hurting the city,' said Doris Lewis, 81, a retired Chicago high school teacher from Hyde Park. Chicago's budget woes have already become fodder for attacks in the New York City mayoral race, with ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is running as an independent, using the crisis to make an indirect dig at the frontrunner Mamdani. 'Chicago is proof that incompetent leadership can turn a deep-dish city into a half-baked mess,' he posted on X last week. Mamdani and Cuomo, who has been coming in as the November contest's runner-up in recent polls, will also face incumbent Mayor Eric Adams and lawyer Jim Walden, both running as independents, and GOP nominee Curtis Sliwa. Lewis, the retired schoolteacher, said she voted for Johnson because he was a 'young black man with a family.' But she realized her error once she saw how he was running the city, calling Johnson 'a disaster, a disgrace and a total disappointment.' 4 Brandon Johnson, Chicago's deeply unpopular mayor, is often said to be of a similar mold to Mamdani. AP 'I've been really angry with myself because going in, I had a general idea that he was pushing an agenda for everybody else except black people,' she said, accusing Johnson of 'playing the race card' to earn the community's support. 'What agenda does Zohran Mamdani have for the black community in New York City since that is who he is courting now?' Lewis predicted that electing Mamdani — who is the frontrunner in the November general election — 'would be a disaster for New York as it is a disaster for Chicago.' 'Socialism hasn't worked for black people, so I am anti-this guy in New York,' she said. A February poll by M3 Strategies found just 20% of voters approved of the job Johnson is doing in Chicago. The embattled mayor is facing a handful of recall efforts, as well as multiple PACs raising millions of dollars to ensure he isn't re-elected in 2027. 4 Chicago Democratic Alderman Raymond Lopez likened Chicago and New York duking it out for which city would be more progressive by virtue of their left-wing mayors 'a socialist nightmare.' LP Media The anti-Johnson sentiment was echoed among elected Democrats in the city. Chicago Democratic Alderman Raymond Lopez, a self-described 'middle of the road Democrat' who voted for Vallas and said he supports law enforcement, capitalism and personal responsibility, called on New Yorkers to 'learn from our mistakes.' 'We see a lot of comparisons being made right now. Both are hyper-progressive, hyper-left socialist Democratic candidates,' he said of the oft-made juxtaposition between Johnson and Mamdani. 'Now you have New York and Chicago duking it out for who is going to be the more socialist, the more progressive city in America. It's almost like a socialist nightmare,' Lopez said. 'Learn from our mistakes and pick someone who is more focused on results and common sense than simply burning down the barn because you want to see fire.'

‘Gold Bar' Bob Menendez' most brazen abuse of power — helping Egypt cover up the murder of Jamal Khashoggi
‘Gold Bar' Bob Menendez' most brazen abuse of power — helping Egypt cover up the murder of Jamal Khashoggi

New York Post

time17 minutes ago

  • New York Post

‘Gold Bar' Bob Menendez' most brazen abuse of power — helping Egypt cover up the murder of Jamal Khashoggi

Bob Menendez advised Egyptian officials how to cover up their part in the grisly murder of Saudi Arabian dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi. This was an egregious human rights abuse and the biggest betrayal to the values he was elected to uphold as a US senator. The disgraced former New Jersey Democrat — now serving an 11-year sentence for corruption and conspiracy to act as a foreign agent for Egypt and Qatar — had coached his high-level Egyptian contacts how to respond to a grilling about Khashoggi's assassination in a Saudi embassy before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in June 2021, court records show. Advertisement As if that wasn't bad enough, Menendez was the powerful chairman of the committee at the time. 7 Disgraced US Senator Bob Menendez helped Egyptian intelligence officials cover up their role in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. AP 7 Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident journalist who had long criticized the government of Mohamed bin Salam, was drugged and dismembered at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in 2018. AP As revealed in my upcoming book, 'Gold Bar Bob: The Downfall of the Most Corrupt US Senator' (co-authored with Thomas Jason Anderson), Menendez met with Abbas Kamel, then director of the General Intelligence Directorate of Egypt. Advertisement He was visiting the US in an effort to persuade the Biden administration to release more than $300 million in weapons sales held up because of concerns over the Middle Eastern country's shoddy record on human rights. The Saudis convicted of killing Khashoggi had obtained the drugs used in his murder from Egyptian intelligence operatives, according to reports and court filings. Khashoggi, a columnist for the Washington Post, was killed and dismembered when he attended an appointment at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2, 2018. 7 Bob Menendez's role in the cover-up of the murder of Jamal Khashoggi is told in the upcoming 'Gold Bar Bob,' which will be published in October. Advertisement 7 Jamal Khashoggi married Hanan Elatr in June, 2018. Months later, he was dead. Courtesy of Hanan Khashoggi Saudi leader Mohammed bin Salman took responsibility for the murder 'because it happened on my watch' but denied ordering the hit. 'What Menendez did was sinful,' said Hanan Elatr Khashoggi, the slain journalist's wife. 'It's sinful when I hear that a US senator accepted a bribe from a dictator to cover up a murder.' Menendez's role was mentioned briefly in court papers when he was indicted on criminal charges in 2023. Advertisement 'He also briefed the head of Egyptian intelligence on questions other US senators were preparing to ask regarding reports that Egypt had aided in a notorious human rights abuse, the murder and dismemberment of a US lawful permanent resident journalist,' court papers say. 'He did so in the explicit words of his co-defendant wife, so that the head of Egyptian intelligence could prepare his 'rebuttals' and 'answers' to Menendez's fellow US senators' questions.' Menendez' wife, Nadine, who was also convicted on bribery and corruption charges, had pressed her husband to help the Egyptians in exchange for bribes, including gold bars and a Mercedes convertible. She is scheduled to be sentenced next month. 7 Bob Menendez accepted gold bars for helping Egyptian officials and an Egyptian businessman in New Jersey. AP 7 Jamal Khashoggi and his wife, Hanan Elatr Khashoggi, who he married shortly before his murder. Courtesy of Hanan Khashoggi 7 The final photograph of Jamal Khashoggi as he walked into the Saudi consulate in Istanbul on October 2, 2018. AP Elatr Khashoggi, who was born in Egypt and grew up in Dubai, now lives in Virginia, where she obtained political asylum in 2023 after she was harassed and tortured by Emirati intelligence operatives following her husband's death, she said. She told The Post she met her husband at a journalism conference in 2009, and married him five months before his murder. She last saw him in September 2018, before he went on his trip to Europe and Turkey, where he wanted to buy an apartment. Advertisement 'This is an open wound and a tragedy,' said Rahmy, who launched an unsuccessful lawsuit against an Israeli spyware company that allowed intelligence operatives to track the Khashoggis — information that ultimately led to his murder, she said. 'Everyone and their mother is trying to bury this story,' Rahmy continued, adding that Elatr Khashoggi is mulling a lawsuit against the 18 Saudis who were tried for the murder in Saudi Arabia. 'We're not giving up until we achieve justice.' Advertisement Perhaps a very small measure of that justice has already been achieved now Menendez is languishing in federal prison. Menendez has appealed to both ex-President Joe Biden and current President Donald Trump for pardons.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store