• Thursday, May 09, 2024

Diaspora

Ashwin Ramaswami first Gen Z Indian-American in fray for Georgia Senate seat

He is hoping to replace incumbent Republican Shawn Still, who was indicted with former President Donald Trump for the 2021 insurrection at the US Capitol.

Ashwin Ramaswami (Picture: X account/@ashwinforga)

By: Shubham Ghosh

ASHWIN Ramaswami has made history by becoming the first Indian-American from Generation Z to pursue a seat in a state or federal legislature in the US, signaling a fresh wave of youthful political leadership emerging from the community.

Ramaswami’s parents migrated to the US from the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu in 1990. Generation Z, also referred to as Zoomers, includes individuals born between 1997 and 2012.

“I’m running for (Georgia) State Senate in order to give back to my community. I want to make sure that everyone has the same opportunities that I had growing up,” Ramaswami, 24, told press agency PTI in a recent interview.

“I want to make sure we have a new voice, people who are young, who come from unconventional backgrounds in politics because it’s really important that we have people who represent us, not just people who can afford to do it,” he said.

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A second-generation Indian-American who has built a career in software engineering, election security, and technology law and policy research, Ramaswami is running in the Democratic party for State Senate in District 48 of Georgia.

He is hoping to replace incumbent Republican Shawn Still, who was indicted with former President Donald Trump for the insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021. If elected, he would be the first Gen Z state senator in Georgia and the only Georgia state legislator with both a computer science and a law degree.

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By doing so, he would also break barriers as the first Indian American in the Georgia State legislature.

“Everyone should make sure they have access to a quality education. We want to make sure people have access to jobs and the economy, entrepreneurship and also access to healthcare, reproductive rights and all these issues that matter to us. That’s why I’ve been running,” Ramaswami said in response to a question.

His parents are both from the information technology sector.

“My parents both came to the US in the 1990s. They both came from Tamil Nadu. My mom is from Chennai, my dad is from Coimbatore. I’ve always grown up with Indian culture and also American culture growing up as well. I’m a Hindu. I’ve been very interested in Indian culture philosophy my whole life,” he said.

While growing up, he went to Chinmaya Mission Balavihar where he learned about Indian epics such as Ramayana and Mahabharata and the Hindu sacred text of Bhagavad Gita.

“When I was in college, I actually learned Sanskrit and ended up reading a lot of ancient texts and got very interested in reading Upanishads, ..and my whole life I’ve been very involved in yoga and meditation and now also teaching Baal Vihara to younger students,” Ramaswami said.

A native of Georgia, Ramaswami has worked with nonprofits, startups, and small businesses to use technology for the public interest and create jobs. As a civil servant, he worked at the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) on cybersecurity and election security, working with state and local election offices to secure the 2020 and 2022 elections. He also worked as a legal fellow in the Georgia attorney general’s Consumer Protection Division.

“I did my undergraduate at Stanford in computer science. I worked a lot on startups at work, but I soon realised that we need more tech people in the federal government, which is why I joined the federal government and started working on election security and cybersecurity starting in 2020,” he said. If elected, he would be the first person in the Georgia state legislature who has this kind of background: a computer science and a law background. Responding to a question, he said that his Gen Z generation is “very aware politically” of what’s going on. “

We very much see the news, we see all these things happening, and we want to ensure a good future for ourselves. But I think one problem we face is we don’t have the resources or ability to actually go and make a difference in the sense that it’s really hard for people my age to get elected because the election process skews towards people who are wealthier and older.”

(With PTI inputs)

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