Democrat Nabeela Syed is on cloud nine: in last Tuesday’s <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/11/10/what-the-midterm-elections-mean-for-us-democracy/" target="_blank">midterm elections</a>, the 23-year-old <a href="https://mobile.twitter.com/NabeelaforIL/status/1590216914839965697">flipped</a> a Republican-held district in Chicago’s north-western suburbs, becoming not only one of the youngest members of the Illinois General Assembly, but also its first Muslim. “It was wild for me to ever consider running for office at such a young age,” she says. “And to win in a district that was carved out for a <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/10/10/us-midterms-2022-predicting-who-will-control-congress/" target="_blank">Republican</a>.” With the hype of last week’s midterm elections now subsiding, one thing has become apparent: Muslim and Arab Americans are running for office like never before — and winning in droves. A total of <a href="https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-jetpac-resource-center-welcome-record-breaking-82-muslim-electoral-victories-in-local-state-federal-elections-including-38-state-legislative-wins/" target="_blank">146 Muslim candidates</a> ran for public office at local, state and federal levels. Forty-eight state legislative candidates ran in 23 of America’s 50 states, and 38 of those candidates won. According to a Pew Research Centre poll, two thirds of Muslim Americans lean Democrat, and the party overall fared far better than expected in the midterms, retaining the Senate and running Republican candidates close in the House of Representatives. While heavyweight politicians <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/07/07/florida-man-sentenced-over-death-threat-to-ilhan-omar/" target="_blank">Ilhan Omar</a> and <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2021/09/23/rashida-tlaib-calls-israel-apartheid-regime-as-congress-votes-on-iron-dome-funding/" target="_blank">Rashida Tlaib</a> were handily re-elected in their respective districts, a host of young, new faces representing Muslims and Arabs in unlikely corners of America have come to the fore. Ms Syed says she was motivated to enter politics having witnessed the rise of extremism in American politics not only at the national level, but in local school board races. The election of Donald Trump in 2016 was “the peak” of that extremism, she says. “Seeing that having a trickledown effect to very local offices, and the more local you get, the more it impacts your day-to-day life,” she says. “I ran because I thought we need a more sensible leadership in all forms of office.” Mana Abdi, 26, whose family hail from <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/uae/2022/10/15/world-must-act-to-help-famine-threatened-somalia-before-it-is-too-late/" target="_blank">Somalia</a>, last week became one of the two first people from the Horn of Africa country elected to office in Maine, America’s most rural state. Despite being born in a refugee camp in Kenya and unable to speak English when she immigrated to the US at age 11, Ms Abdi does not see her life journey as being improbable. “I don’t think I’ve ever looked at anything in my life and thought: ‘Oh, I couldn’t do this,’” she says. “I guess I don’t really view myself as a politician. I think that I’m more of an advocate.” Ms Abdi says her motivation and fascination with politics developed while studying political science at university. “Learning the theory and then coming back to my community in Lewistown and see those theories of identity politics impacting people in their day-to-day lives, it opened my eyes,” she says. “It ignited my interest to ask: who is pulling the strings? Who is creating these policies that are ultimately not yielding positive results for citizens in my district?” She ran unopposed after her Republican challenger withdrew from the race in August after drawing controversy by writing on Facebook in September 2020 that Muslims “should not be allowed to hold public office”. For Sami Scheetz, whose mother is from Syria, becoming Iowa's first Arab-American state representative was the culmination of years of political activism. “I started organising for President [Barack] Obama in 2012, when I was in high school,” the 26-year-old says. He feels that running for office in the city where he grew up — Cedar Rapids — helped him over the line. “It takes a lot of work, but it’s meaningful work.” With Mr Trump announcing his 2024 bid for the presidency on Tuesday, the shadow of the former president’s 2016 so-called <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/the-americas/refugees-breathe-sigh-of-relief-as-biden-repeals-trump-s-muslim-ban-1.1151425">Muslim ban</a>, when his administration stopped immigration from several Muslim-majority countries, hangs heavy for Mr Scheetz. “His rhetoric towards immigrants and people of colour and minorities is extremely, extremely abusive and hurtful and divisive,” he says. “We don’t need that in our politics.” A Democrat, Mr Scheetz believes President Joe Biden, who has struggled with poor ratings in recent months, should stand for re-election in 2024. “I think he’s done a phenomenal job,” says Mr Scheetz. “The <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/us-news/2022/08/09/biden-hails-once-in-a-generation-investment-in-us-semiconductor-bill/">Chips Act</a> is going to bring tonnes and tonnes of work to Iowa.” For Ms Abdi, however, the time for new blood in the White House is now. “As we talk about young people voting and being engaged, that also means sometimes removing those — even myself — if I feel that I no longer have the pulse of young people,” she says. But closer to home, for Ms Syed and her colleagues across the country, now begins the arduous work of governing in a country that is every bit as divided now as it was before the midterms. Still, it is not lost on her that this is a moment of change. “I hope me running for office indicates to young people and young Muslim women that we belong in politics,” she says. “We belong in spaces that we are not necessarily represented.”