Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Aisha Chughtai
View on WikipediaAisha Siddida Chughtai (born September 4, 1997)[1] is an American community organizer and politician serving on the Minneapolis City Council, representing the 10th Ward. Chughtai was the council's vice president from 2024 to 2026. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she was elected in 2021 to succeed retiring Council President Lisa Bender. She is the youngest person, and first Muslim woman, elected to the Council.[2] She is a member of the Twin Cities Democratic Socialists of America (DSA).[3]
Key Information
Early life and career
[edit]Chughtai's parents are immigrants from Pakistan; her father worked as a mechanic and her mother as a Quranic instructor. She grew up in Houston, where her family experienced housing instability, and moved to Mankato, Minnesota during the 2008 financial crisis.[4][5]
Chughtai has worked on numerous political campaigns, including as campaign manager of U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar's 2018 campaign. She later worked as a political organizer for the SEIU Minnesota State Council.[1]
Chughtai was elected to the city council in 2021. In 2022, she served on the Business, Inspections, Housing & Zoning and Public Works & Infrastructure Committees.[6] In 2023, she was appointed Council Vice President alongside Council President Elliott Payne.[7]
In 2026, Chughtai stepped down as council vice president, backing Jamal Osman as a successor, and took on the new role of majority leader. She sits on seven of the council's eight committees, chairs the Budget Committee, and is vice chair of the Committee of the Whole.[8]
Views and initiatives
[edit]Chughtai advocates for community control over the police, saying that democratizing control over the MPD would lead to more appropriate ward-by-ward safety solutions.[9]
She advocated for a 24-hour bus lane on Hennepin Avenue, which Mayor Jacob Frey vetoed.[6][10] She has also said she believes that installing protected bike lanes is important to promoting public safety.[9]
Chughtai advocates for rent control tied to inflation, vacancy control, and stronger protections for renters.[11]
Chughtai prioritizes making the city more climate-resilient and ecologically friendly by promoting infrastructure projects such as warming/cooling accommodations and public transportation.[11] In December 2025, she advocated for a ban on robotaxis.[12]
Electoral history
[edit]2021 Minneapolis City Council election
[edit]In 2021, Chughtai announced her candidacy for retiring Council President Lisa Bender's Ward 10 seat. Her campaign focused on expanding affordable housing and strengthening local labor laws.[4] The DFL did not issue an endorsement in the ward, as no candidate achieved the necessary vote threshold.[13] She was endorsed by the abortion rights organization #VOTEPROCHOICE.[14]
Chughtai won the instant-runoff election on November 3 with 50.3% of the vote to her nearest challenger's 33.6%.[15][16] She took office on January 3, 2022, becoming the first Asian American, Muslim woman, and youngest member of the Council.[17] She took the oath of office on a ceremonial Quran also used by Ilhan Omar, Keith Ellison, Omar Fateh, and numerous other Muslim officials elected in Minneapolis.[18]
2023 Minneapolis City Council election
[edit]On November 7, 2023, Chughtai was reelected to a second term with 60.7% of the first-round vote.[19] The DFL endorsed her for reelection in a virtual vote after violence at the Ward 10 DFL convention forced early adjournment.[20] Her challenger Nasri Warsame's supporters had stormed the stage and assaulted Chughtai's staff and supporters.[21]
2025 Minneapolis City Council election
[edit]Chughtai was reelected in 2025, defeating executive director of the Stevens Square Community Organization and Target corporate employee Lydia Millard.[22]
The ward saw no DFL endorsement when Chughtai earned 52% of the vote to Millard's 47% and delegates unanimously voted to end the convention early rather than hold further votes.[23] Chughtai alleges that she was assaulted during the convention by one of Millard's supporters.[23]
Chughtai was opposed by We Love Minneapolis PAC,[24] a political action committee chaired in part by ward 10 landlords and business owners Andrea Corbin and Jim Rubin.[25][26] After We Love Minneapolis disbanded, Thrive MPLS formed, with an overlap in staff, and began supporting her competitor.[27] Chughtai was also opposed by All of Minneapolis PAC, a PAC promoting conservative Democrats in Minneapolis.[28]
Political organizations supporting Chughtai included Minneapolis for the Many PAC, Women Winning, Outfront Action, Sunrise Twin Cities, and the Twin Cities Democratic Socialists of America.[28] Several labor unions and politicians endorsed her.[28]
Personal life
[edit]Chughtai strongly identifies as a renter, mentioning it on her campaign materials, and lives in Minneapolis's Whittier neighborhood.[6][9][11] She has said this allows her to connect with her constituents, 80% of whom are renters.[9]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Whalen, Eamon (October 28, 2021). "In Minneapolis, the Movement Heads for the Voting Booth". The Nation. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ Birnstengel, Grace; Collins, Jon (November 9, 2021). "Socialism comes to the Minneapolis City Council". MPR. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ Birnstengel, Grace; Collins, Jon (10 November 2021). "Democratic Socialists eager to bring progressive agenda to Minneapolis council". Sahan Journal. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
- ^ a b Gustavo, Solomon (February 4, 2021). "Meet the Minneapolis City Council Candidate: Aisha Chughtai". MinnPost. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ Simba, Cynthia (April 23, 2021). "Rep. Ilhan Omar's former campaign manager running for Minneapolis City Council". Mshale. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ a b c ""I am who I am": Aisha Chughtai's first eight months a whirlwind". www.southwestvoices.news. Retrieved 2025-09-28.
- ^ Fischer, Samantha; Croman, John (January 8, 2024). "Payne, Chughtai elected new leadership team at Minneapolis City Hall". Kare 11 News. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
- ^ Hoffman, Melody (January 7, 2026). "Minneapolis City Council elects new leadership, committee assignments". Southwest Voices. Retrieved 10 January 2026.
- ^ a b c d Rybak, Charlie (December 7, 2021). "An interview with incoming Ward 10 Council Member Aisha Chughtai". Southwest Voices. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
- ^ "Mayor Jacob Frey vetoes plan for 24-hour bus lanes along Hennepin Avenue - CBS Minnesota". www.cbsnews.com. 2022-06-18. Retrieved 2025-09-28.
- ^ a b c "A guide to the 2021 Minneapolis mayor and City Council candidates". Star Tribune. October 1, 2021. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ Winter, Deena (2025-12-04). "Some Minneapolis City Council members want to stop Waymo driverless cars". Minnesota Star Tribune. Retrieved 2025-12-04.
- ^ Mahamud, Faiza (June 10, 2021). "Minneapolis DFL endorses in seven council races, fails to endorse in six". Star Tribune. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ "Meet Our 2021 Candidates". #VOTEPROCHOICE. Archived from the original on 14 February 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
- ^ Peters, Joey (November 2, 2021). "Your Minnesota Election Day 2021 results: All the updates on races in Minneapolis and St. Paul". Sahan Journal. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ "2021 City Council Ward 10 election results". vote.minneapolismn.gov. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
- ^ Navratil, Liz (January 3, 2022). "Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, new City Council are sworn in". Star Tribune. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
- ^ Ansari, Hibah (January 3, 2022). "A special Qur'an holds the signature of almost every Minnesota Muslim elected to office. At a historic swearing-in ceremony, three Minneapolis City Council members added their names to the list". Sahan Journal. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
- ^ "Minneapolis City Council election results". Minnesota Public Radio. November 7, 2023. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
- ^ Orrick, Dave (June 23, 2023). "In the wake of chaotic ward convention, Council Member Aisha Chughtai wins Minneapolis DFL backing". Star Tribune. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
- ^ Goyette, Jared (2023-06-01). "Nasri Warsame responds to being banned by the DFL". FOX 9. Retrieved 2025-09-28.
- ^ "Council Candidate Lydia Millard Responds to Attack by Minneapolis for the Many | Minneapolis Times". minneapolistimes.com. Retrieved 2025-06-02.
- ^ a b Winter, Deena (2025-06-03). "Minneapolis Council Vice President Chughtai fails to win DFL endorsement; assault allegations fly". Minnesota Star Tribune. Retrieved 2025-06-03.
- ^ "Follow the money: Landlords spend big in city election – Southside Pride". 2025-05-06. Retrieved 2025-06-02.
- ^ Bretts, Anne (2023-07-28). "Just Sold: Mint owner begins selling rental portfolio". Retrieved 2025-06-02.
- ^ Dahlin, Taylor. "Who is Behind We Love Minneapolis? Who Funds We Love Minneapolis?". Taylor Dahlin. Archived from the original on 2025-05-13. Retrieved 2025-06-02.
- ^ Dahlin, Taylor (July 25, 2025). "New PAC in Minneapolis: Thrive Mpls".
- ^ a b c Gordon, Cam (2025-06-20). "Millard challenges Chughtai in Ward 10". Southwest Connector. Retrieved 2025-09-29.
Aisha Chughtai
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Childhood and Family Origins
Aisha Chughtai is the eldest daughter of a Muslim immigrant family whose parents held blue-collar jobs.[2][4] As a first-generation immigrant, she grew up amid financial hardship, including periods of poverty where the family faced choices between essentials like groceries and rent.[2][5] Her family also experienced housing instability during her childhood, an issue she has cited as shaping her lifelong emphasis on stable shelter as foundational to well-being.[6] Chughtai helped raise three younger siblings while assisting her parents in navigating life in the United States.[2] At age seven, her family confronted a health crisis when an undocumented parent was diagnosed with a breast tumor, facing limited time without unaffordable urgent treatment.[7] She entered the workforce young, taking jobs in retail and childcare amid these challenges.[2]Education and Formative Influences
Chughtai was born on September 4, 1997, as the first-born daughter in a Muslim immigrant family from Pakistan, where her parents worked blue-collar jobs and raised four children amid financial hardship.[1] Her family experienced housing instability and poverty, which required her to assist her parents in navigating daily challenges as a child.[6] These early circumstances instilled a focus on economic precarity and support for immigrant communities, shaping her later advocacy.[2] No public records detail formal higher education, but Chughtai entered the workforce early as a frontline employee in retail and childcare sectors, gaining direct exposure to low-wage labor conditions.[1] Her formative professional influences emerged through involvement in progressive campaigns, including roles supporting Ilhan Omar's congressional bid and Bernie Sanders' presidential effort, as well as positions at organizations like Take Action Minnesota.[2] This period marked her transition into community organizing, particularly with groups such as Inquilinxs Unidxs, emphasizing tenant rights and housing justice in Minneapolis's immigrant-heavy neighborhoods.[2] By her early 20s, Chughtai had joined the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Minnesota State Council as a union organizer, focusing on workers' rights and mutual aid efforts in Ward 10.[1] These experiences, rooted in her family's struggles and hands-on activism for immigrants' rights, cultivated her commitment to socialist-leaning policies and grassroots movements, influencing her entry into electoral politics.[2]Pre-Political Activism
Union Organizing and Labor Advocacy
Prior to entering electoral politics, Aisha Chughtai served as a political organizer for the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Minnesota State Council, where she advocated for workers' rights through engagement with policymakers and community stakeholders.[2] In this capacity, her efforts included lobbying Minneapolis City Council members on labor issues affecting SEIU-represented workers, such as service industry employees and public sector staff.[6] Chughtai's labor organizing experience emphasized building support for union priorities, including fair wages, workplace protections, and policy reforms benefiting low-wage earners in Minnesota.[8] She has cited this background as foundational to her advocacy, drawing from direct involvement in movements addressing economic precarity for immigrant and working-class communities.[9] Her pre-political labor work aligned with broader progressive union strategies, such as coordinating endorsements and grassroots mobilization, though specific campaigns she led remain undocumented in public records beyond general organizing roles.[6] This phase of activism positioned her as a proponent of strengthening collective bargaining and countering employer resistance in service-sector industries.[2]Community Organizing in Minneapolis
Prior to her election to the Minneapolis City Council, Aisha Chughtai participated in community organizing efforts centered on housing rights and tenant advocacy in Minneapolis neighborhoods. She founded and served as a member of the Whittier Solidarity Network, which addressed local tenant concerns such as living conditions and displacement risks in the Whittier area.[6] Chughtai also collaborated with Inquilinxs Unidxs, a tenant rights organization, to safeguard residents' housing and strengthen community ties amid eviction threats and gentrification pressures.[2] In response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the civil unrest following George Floyd's killing on May 25, 2020, Chughtai helped organize mutual aid distributions through Pimento Relief Service, operating out of Pimento Jamaican Kitchen to provide food, supplies, and support to affected communities in Minneapolis.[6] These efforts emphasized direct assistance to vulnerable populations, including immigrants and low-income renters, during periods of heightened economic and social disruption. She further contributed by volunteering at homeless encampments, advocating for immediate housing solutions and policy changes to prevent encampment clearances without alternatives.[6] Chughtai's organizing aligned with broader progressive causes, including support for a $15 minimum wage, though her housing-focused work distinguished it from formal labor union activities.[6] These pre-2021 initiatives reflected her emphasis on grassroots responses to systemic issues like affordability and instability, drawing from her family's own experiences with housing precarity.[6]Political Rise
2021 City Council Election
Chughtai, a community organizer and union activist, announced her candidacy for Minneapolis City Council Ward 10 in early 2021, positioning herself as a representative for renters, workers, and immigrant communities in the diverse, urban ward encompassing areas like Uptown, Lyn-Lake, and Whittier.[10] Her platform emphasized strengthening labor rights, expanding affordable housing options, and addressing systemic inequities exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2020 George Floyd unrest, including calls for reallocating police resources toward community-based safety alternatives.[11] She received endorsements from the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), and several labor unions, aligning her with the progressive faction seeking to shift the council toward more transformative policies.[11] The election featured seven candidates, including Chughtai, Alicia Gibson, Katie Jones, Chris Parsons, David Wheeler, Ubah Nur, and undeclared write-ins, in a nonpartisan race conducted via ranked-choice voting where voters ranked up to three preferences.[12] Incumbent Pat Carney did not seek re-election, opening the seat amid a broader wave of progressive challenges across Minneapolis wards following the 2020 protests.[3]| Candidate | Round 1 Votes (%) | Round 2 Votes | Round 3 Votes | Final Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aisha Chughtai | 3,934 (36.9%) | 4,163 | 5,360 | Elected (50.3%) |
| Alicia Gibson | 1,999 (18.8%) | 3,022 | 3,581 | Defeated |
| Katie Jones | 2,086 (19.6%) | 2,476 | Eliminated | Eliminated |
| Chris Parsons | 1,610 (15.1%) | Eliminated | - | Eliminated |
| David Wheeler | 625 (5.9%) | Eliminated | - | Eliminated |
| Ubah Nur | 374 (3.5%) | Eliminated | - | Eliminated |
| Write-ins | 31 (0.3%) | Eliminated | - | Eliminated |
.jpg)