Silicon Valley Pakistani-Americans Among Top Donors to Mamdani Campaign

Omer Hasan and Mohammad Javed are the top donors to Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral campaign in New York City, according to media reports. Both are former executives of Silicon Valley technology firm AppLovin. Born and raised in Silicon Valley, Omer is the son of a Pakistani-American couple who are long-time residents of Silicon Valley, California. 

Omer Hasan, Top Donor to Mamdani Campaign

Muhammad Javed donated $251,500 to New Yorkers for Lower Costs, a super-PAC backing Zohran Mamdani. Omer gave $250,000 to this super PAC. Other Mamdani super PAC donors include Liz Simons, Philanthropist, and daughter of hedge-fund billionaire Jim Simons, who gave $250,000 and Unity & Justice Fund, the political arm of the Council on American-Islamic Relations CAIR, that gave $100,000. But the biggest support has come from small donors to the Mamdani campaign. It has received a lot more money from small-dollar donors.  In August 2025, Mamdani's campaign had raised over $1 million from more than 8,600 private donors, with half of the individual donations being less than $25. His campaign also got millions in public matching funds due to this strong small-dollar donor support. 

Andrew Cuomo, Mamdani's main rival, is bankrolled by Republican Zionist billionaires like Bill Ackman, a hedge fund manager who backs Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's genocidal war in Gaza. Mamdani has called Netanyahu a "war criminal". He has promised to order the New York Police Department to arrest the Israeli Prime Minister if he is elected. 

Mother Jones reported that Cuomo's super PAC Fix The City got huge contributions from the rich and powerful donors like  DoorDash ($1 million), along with Ackman ($500,000), and former mayor Michael Bloomberg ($8.3 million). Media mogul Barry Diller and Netflix chairman Reed Hastings gave a quarter of a million. Home Depot co-founder and Republican mega-donor Ken Langone gave $100,000. Pro-Trump hedge-funder Dan Loeb gave $350,000. James and Kathryn Murdoch offered $50,000 apiece. So did Stephen Ross, who lives in the borough of West Palm Beach, Florida and owns the Miami Dolphins. Alice Walton, of the Bentonville, Arkansas Waltons, pitched in with a humble offering of $100,000. Both Greenwich, Connecticut’s Jeff Wilpon, and the man he sold the New York Mets to—Stamford’s Steve Cohen—were good for $25,000.

Cuomo continues to significantly lag Mamdani in the polls in spite of having a huge funding advantage. A CBS News/YouGov poll (September 7–13) put Mamdani at 43% to Cuomo's 28%, a 15-point lead. A Marist survey the same week showed Mamdani ahead 45% to 24%, while Quinnipiac gave him a 22-point lead at 45% to 23%. An Emerson College poll for PIX11 and The Hill had a nearly identical 43% to 28% margin, and a New York Times/Siena poll (September 2–6) showed Mamdani leading 46% to 24%, according to Newsweek

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Comment by Riaz Haq 3 hours ago

Dylan Williams
@dylanotes

“AIPAC is becoming an increasingly toxic brand for some Democrats on Capitol Hill”

“Democrats who once counted AIPAC among their top donors have in recent weeks refused to take the group’s donations”

Polls show “American support for Israel is crumbling”

https://x.com/dylanotes/status/1973893359371759888

----------------

AIPAC has long been a force on Capitol Hill, but some Democrats who once counted the group among their top donors have recently refused to take its donations.



Democrats Pull Away From AIPAC, Reflecting a Broader Shift
A quiet retreat by Democrats from the pre-eminent pro-Israel lobbying group is the latest evidence of a realignment underway in Congress on Israel.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/us/politics/democrats-aipac.html

-------------------------

https://gvwire.com/2025/10/02/democrats-pull-away-from-aipac-reflec...


WASHINGTON — For 17 years, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., the minority leader, has been taking polite meetings with J Street, a center-left lobbying group that promotes a two-state solution in the Middle East.

But in all those years of relationship building, Jeffries never sought the group’s endorsement. He was more closely associated with the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a hard-line pro-Israel lobbying organization that has long supported him financially and has in the past discouraged lawmakers it backs from aligning themselves formally with a group that holds a different stance on Israel.

That changed last month, when Jeffries for the first time was open to and accepted J Street’s official support. It was a coup for J Street, which is highly critical of the current Israeli government and seeking to establish itself as the mainstream voice about Israel on Capitol Hill.

J Street’s endorsement of Jeffries attracted little attention on Capitol Hill, where the group already backs well over half of Democratic members of Congress and the rest of the House Democratic leadership team.

With American support for the Israeli government’s management of the conflict in the Gaza Strip undergoing a seismic reversal, and Democratic voters’ support for the Jewish state dropping off steeply, AIPAC is becoming an increasingly toxic brand for some Democrats on Capitol Hill.

Democrat Lawmakers Turn From Unconditional Support
It is the latest evidence of a realignment underway in Congress on Israel, as Democratic lawmakers turn away from a decades-old bipartisan consensus on Capitol Hill around offering unconditional support for the Jewish state.

Some Democrats who once counted AIPAC among their top donors have in recent weeks refused to take the group’s donations. Its annual trip to Israel, a formative experience for many lawmakers that once drew a majority of first-term members, has seen a drop-off in Democratic attendance. And a majority of the Senate Democratic Caucus has voted in recent months for legislation opposed by AIPAC to cut off weapons sales to Israel.

AIPAC has long been a force on Capitol Hill, able to spend seemingly whatever it took to defeat lawmakers it viewed as hostile to Israel. Last year, for instance, the group spent more than $23 million to defeat Reps. Cori Bush of Missouri and Jamaal Bowman of New York, two progressives who vocally opposed unconditional U.S. aid to Israel.

AIPAC also poured more than $1 million into a Democratic primary in Oregon, boosting Maxine E. Dexter in her race against Susheela Jayapal, a former county commissioner and the sister of Rep. Pramila Jayapal of Washington, the former chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

When Dexter won, AIPAC crowed about the victory, noting Dexter’s “anti-Israel opponent” had been endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and by J Street.

Comment by Riaz Haq 3 hours ago

“AIPAC is becoming an increasingly toxic brand for some Democrats on Capitol Hill”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/us/politics/democrats-aipac.html

-------------------------

https://gvwire.com/2025/10/02/democrats-pull-away-from-aipac-reflec...
But public sentiment on the war in Gaza has shifted in the two years since the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attack on Israel. And while Democrats increasingly sympathize with the Palestinians in the conflict, AIPAC has remained unflinchingly loyal to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel. The group has framed his military offensive in Gaza as a “just and moral” war against Hamas, which it says bears exclusive blame for the suffering of civilians there.

And Democrats are less willing to align themselves with that position.

Democratic Members Turn Away From AIPAC
Three Democratic members of Congress who had previously relied on AIPAC as a top campaign contributor have said over the past few weeks that they would no longer accept donations from the group: Reps. Morgan McGarvey of Kentucky, Deborah K. Ross of North Carolina and Valerie P. Foushee of North Carolina.


Dexter, who relied on AIPAC’s financial support to win her primary last year, recently said the United States “must halt the transfer of offensive weapons to Israel and ensure immediate, sufficient and sustained humanitarian aid into Gaza.” She is also a cosponsor of the Block the Bombs Act, which seeks to restrict the sale of specific weapons to Israel until the country meets certain human rights conditions.

Dexter is not on AIPAC’s list of candidates it has endorsed this cycle. A spokesperson for Dexter did not respond to a request for comment.

Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of J Street, said the shifts reflected a disconnect between current views of Israel and AIPAC’s stance.

“We are at a tipping point given what has happened over the last two years in Gaza, and the fact that AIPAC still maintains that all we can do is support the government of Israel — they’ve run into a wall,” Ben-Ami said in an interview.

A spokesperson for AIPAC, Marshall Wittmann, said that “the overwhelming majority” of Democrats continue to understand that being pro-Israel “is both good politics and good policy.”

But dwindling Democratic attendance at AIPAC’s summer trip to Israel, which has long been a rite of passage for new members of Congress in both parties and a powerful recruiting tool for the organization, illustrates the trend.

The trip, hosted by the group’s educational arm, helps AIPAC shape the views of members of Congress on Israel, with some still defending Israel’s conduct of the war despite the considerable evidence that Israeli strikes are regularly killing and injuring civilians and that aid cutoffs have led to widespread hunger.

“What we found is that contrary to world opinion, Israel has been doing everything it possibly can to ensure that there’s minimal damage to civilians who are not part of Hamas’ army,” Rep. Steny Hoyer, D-Md., long an unofficial leader of the junket, said in a video he recorded for AIPAC during the trip in August.

In the past, a majority of the first-term Democratic House members would attend. In 2023, for instance, 24 House Democrats, including Jeffries, traveled with AIPAC to Israel. That year, there were 34 first-term Democrats.

This year, 11 out of the 33 first-term House Democrats attended. Jeffries, who regularly made the annual trip, did not go this year. Seven other Democratic members had committed to the trip in August to the point where AIPAC purchased and booked their flights to Israel, according to ethics disclosures, but they ultimately pulled out. And some of the new members who did go received backlash in their districts for participating in an AIPAC-aligned trip.

The pivot underway among Democrats in Congress reflects a broader shift in public opinion. A recent poll from The New York Times and Siena University found that American support for Israel is crumbling, with voters voicing negative views of the Israeli government’s management of the conflict.

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