DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

What to Know About Ilhan Omar, the Lawmaker Attacked in Minnesota

January 28, 2026
in News
What to Know About Ilhan Omar, the Lawmaker Attacked in Minnesota

Ilhan Omar, the Democratic member of Congress who was attacked at a public event in Minnesota on Tuesday, has come under fire for years, including from President Trump.

“I’ve survived war. And I’m definitely going to survive intimidation and whatever these people think they can throw at me,” Ms. Omar said after the attack, in which the assailant sprayed her with an unknown substance. She appeared unharmed after the episode. A suspect, later identified by the police as Anthony J. Kazmierczak, 55, was arrested at the scene; his motives were unclear on Wednesday.

Ms. Omar, who represents Minnesota’s fifth congressional district, has played an outsize role in national politics and has long been a target of right-wing criticism.

Mr. Trump has singled her out for years, frequently leading his supporters at rallies to chant, “Send her back” to Somalia, where she was born. He has called Ms. Omar “garbage,” suggested without evidence that she married her brother and falsely said that she praised Islamist terrorist groups like Al Qaeda.

Ms. Omar who was born in 1982, emigrated to the United States as a refugee at age 12.

She fled Somalia’s civil war for a refugee camp across the border in Kenya. In 1995, her family emigrated to the United States, living in Virginia before settling in Minneapolis, where many Somali immigrants have built a community.

In interviews, Ms. Omar, who wears a hijab, has described enduring bullying in school as a young, veiled recent arrival to the United States. Other kids, she said, stuck gum on her head scarf and knocked her down stairs.

Her father “sat me down, and he said, ‘Listen, these people who are doing all of these things to you, they’re not doing something to you because they dislike you,’” Ms. Omar said in a 2018 interview with The New York Times. “They are doing something to you because they feel threatened in some way by your existence.”

Ms. Omar went to North Dakota State University before returning to Minnesota, where she began climbing the ranks in Minneapolis politics. In 2017, she was elected to the state’s House of Representatives. Two years later, In 2019, she took office as one of the first two Muslim women elected to Congress, alongside Representative Rashida Tlaib, Democrat of Michigan.

Ms. Omar arrived in Washington on a firmly progressive ticket — supporting L.G.B.T.Q. rights and Medicare for All. She became part of a group of Democratic lawmakers firmly on the party’s left that included the New York Democrat Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and was nicknamed “the Squad.”

Ms. Omar quickly became one of the most polarizing members of Congress, a household name for critics and supporters alike.

Some of her most contentious stances have been tied to Israel and the war in Gaza. Ms. Omar has long supported a movement to boycott Israel and accused its government of committing genocide in Gaza. Israel strongly denies the accusation.

Pro-Israel critics argued that some of her remarks crossed a line into antisemitism. In 2019, Ms. Omar wrote on social media that U.S. support for Israel was “all about the Benjamins” — referring to hundred-dollar bills. Some Jewish groups said the remark invoked anti-Jewish tropes involving money; Ms. Omar later apologized for the remark.

Ms. Omar’s supporters have argued that she has become a lightning rod for bad-faith critics who cannot abide seeing a Muslim woman in a head covering on the floor of Congress.

In recent weeks, House Republicans have threatened to open an investigation into Ms. Omar in an apparent effort to tie her to a Minnesota fraud scandal in which, law enforcement officials say, members of the Somali community billed state agencies for social services that were never provided.

Mr. Trump has used the scandal to broadly characterize Somali Americans, including Ms. Omar, as ingrates who should “go back to where they came from.” Many Somali Americans in Minnesota say the scandal has tarnished the reputation of their community of about 80,000 people.

Law enforcement officials have been looking into some of Ms. Omar’s finances as part of an investigation that began under the Biden administration. The New York Times reported this week that in 2024, the Justice Department began scrutinizing her finances, campaign spending and interactions with a foreign citizen.

No charges have been filed. Ms. Omar has denied wrongdoing, saying that “years of ‘investigations’ have found nothing.”

Aaron Boxerman is a Times reporter covering Israel and Gaza. He is based in Jerusalem.

The post What to Know About Ilhan Omar, the Lawmaker Attacked in Minnesota appeared first on New York Times.

‘Ted Lasso’ Season 4 Sets Summer Release, Unveils First Look at Women’s Soccer Team | Photos
News

‘Ted Lasso’ Season 4 Sets Summer Release, Unveils First Look at Women’s Soccer Team | Photos

by TheWrap
January 28, 2026

“Ted Lasso” will make its return after three years this summer, as the titular football coach returns to Richmond. The ...

Read more
News

The week’s bestselling books, Feb. 1

January 28, 2026
News

Russia strike hits Ukraine passenger train amid new push for talks

January 28, 2026
News

Claire Danes reveals her third child’s name years after surprise baby caused ‘convulsive meltdown’

January 28, 2026
News

Hungary announces charges against Budapest mayor over Pride events

January 28, 2026
Why Chris Rock Turned Down More Than One Offer to Be on ‘The Sopranos’

Why Chris Rock Turned Down More Than One Offer to Be on ‘The Sopranos’

January 28, 2026
Insiders Say Trump Move Is a Major ‘Disaster’ for ICE Barbie

Insiders Say Trump Move Is a Major ‘Disaster’ for ICE Barbie

January 28, 2026
Scientists Gave Fruit Flies Magic Mushrooms. Here’s What Happened.

Scientists Gave Fruit Flies Magic Mushrooms. Here’s What Happened.

January 28, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025