Suhas Subramanyam, an Indian American technocrat, has vowed to continue defending reproductive rights despite the Loudoun County Republican party’s calls to ban him from houses of worship in Northern Virginia over his pro-choice record.
“Millions of Virginians of every political and religious background support a woman’s right to choose, and I’m proud to have championed reproductive rights for years in the General Assembly,” said the son of Indian Americans who is running for the US Congress in Virginia’s 10th District.
“To suggest that I or any other pro-choice Virginian should be banned from practicing our faith is outrageous and contrary to the values of our commonwealth and our country,” he stated in response to Loudon Republican party committee’s call.
“I will continue to proudly practice my faith and celebrate the diverse religious traditions in Virginia’s 10th District, and I will not back down from my commitment to defending every woman’s reproductive rights from the right-wing extremists who are relentlessly pursuing a nationwide abortion ban.”
READ: Suhas Subramanyam running for Congress from Virginia (November 20, 2023)
The Loudoun County Republican Committee called for Subramanyam – the first Indian-American, South Asian, and Hindu ever elected to the General Assembly – to be “denied access” to houses of worship in a statement posted on Facebook.
The statement was in response to Subramanyam’s call for mifepristone — a drug that blocks a hormone called progesterone that is needed for a pregnancy to continue— access to be protected as right-wing MAGA activists once again take their push to ban abortion nationwide to the Supreme Court.
Subramanyam, who served as a technology policy advisor to President Barack Obama, says his family’s story in America began in Virginia’s 10th District when his mother immigrated to the United States through Dulles Airport in 1979.
His mother, a native of Bengaluru, India, immigrated to the United States to unite with his father, live her American dream, and pursue a career in medicine.
Subramanyam’s parents raised him to value service to the community above all else. Whether as a Capitol Hill aide, advisor to the Obama White House, an elected official in Richmond, or as a volunteer EMT, he has taken that lesson to heart throughout his life, Subramanyam says.
“Every step of the way, he has taken on the toughest fights to deliver real results for our community,” he stated.
After leaving the White House, Subramanyam started his own small business in Loudoun County and also served the community as a volunteer medic, EMT, and firefighter.
Subramanyam resides in Ashburn, Virginia, with his wife, Miranda, and their two daughters.