
To continue reading this article and others for free, please sign up for our newsletter.
Sahan Journal publishes deep, reported news for and with immigrants and communities of color—the kind of stories you won’t find anywhere else.
Unlock our in-depth reporting by signing up for our free newsletter.
When Thom Miller decided to step aside from the St. Louis Park City Council to pave the way for fresh voices that would reflect the city’s increasing diversity, he asked Nadia Mohamed to help him.
After two weeks of searching, Nadia decided she wanted it.
“I realized how much my voice is needed,” Nadia, 23, said Wednesday morning after making history, winning Miller’s at-large seat to become the City Council’s first Muslim and first Somali member.
Nadia won easily with 63 percent of the first-choice votes in the race to replace Miller. It sent a message that St. Louis Park is a place to “be inclusive in the day-to-day decision-making levels in the city,” she said.
Nadia came to St. Louis Park as a Somali refugee at age 10 and enrolled in St. Louis Park public schools. After graduating from high school in 2015, she said she struggled as an adult to feel at home in a city where social circles are often segregated.
“That’s when I started realizing how much I felt like a visitor in my community,” Nadia said in an interview. She wanted to help build connections between different cultural groups.
“A lot of times you don’t get to have that space where you’re connecting to community members of different races and different cultures,” Nadia said. “I wanted to build that space.”
Nadia joined the St. Louis Park Multicultural Advisory Committee, which helps connect the city’s police departments with different cultural groups. She helped guide the city’s mourning of a 2017 terrorist attack in Mogadishu and outreach to the local Somali community.
She also helped teach community education classes, volunteered at St. Louis Park High School and hosted community Iftars. In March, her work connecting communities was honored when she won the St. Louis Park Human Rights Award.
Running for office meant “rewiring” how Nadia thought about who an elected official could be.
“When I close my eyes and think of an elected official, I get a different image that’s been in the history books,” she said.
It was also a challenge to learn how to ask for support and votes “coming from a culture where asking isn’t the norm.” But she found that knocking on doors and listening to prospective constituents’ issues helped her get to know her community on a deeper level.
“It just builds that connection that I was always looking for,” Nadia said.
As a council member, Nadia plans to focus on affordable housing, climate action, youth engagement and racial equity.
A resident of affordable housing, she wants St. Louis Park to create more housing options for low-income people. She also wants to help the city achieve its goal of being carbon neutral by 2040.
Miller, the outgoing council member, said he realized over the course of his term that the City Council needed more diverse perspectives to move toward its priorities on affordable housing, racial equity and climate action.
The current council is all white and its members come from similar socioeconomic backgrounds. Miller said he asked Nadia if she knew of anyone who could run for his seat who would bring a different perspective.
“When Nadia said that she was actually considering it, I was just elated,” he said.
Miller stayed in the race until the day of the filing deadline, hoping his incumbency would deter “establishment candidates” from running and leave the door open for Nadia. Six hours before the deadline, Nadia filed for the election. Miller endorsed her.
Miller said it was “a hundred percent worth it” to step back from the work he loved on the City Council to make room for a new voice. “If I could have stayed on the council and brought Nadia on board, that would have been great,” he said. “But the council is going to be far, far better with Nadia on it than Thom Miller.”
Jake Spano, the mayor of St. Louis Park who won reelection Tuesday night and endorsed Nadia, said her priorities of climate action, affordable housing and youth engagement align well with his own.
The two have already been discussing ways they can “accelerate that work,” he said.
“I’ve found her to be really bright and enthusiastic, and I would imagine that she’ll bring a fresh set of eyes to things that we have taken for granted,” he said.
By using city resources equitably and including more voices in decision-making, Nadia said, St. Louis Park can be “a city that works for everybody.”
“Oftentimes we ask for different voices at the table but we don’t take effective action to really get there,” Nadia said. “I think St. Louis Park has built up the support and built up the resources to get more people of color and more people of different backgrounds to come be engaged in the community.”
Spano said Nadia’s identity as a Somali woman was only one element of the fresh perspective she would bring to the council.
“She also happens to be young, that is a perspective we do not have on our council right now,” the mayor said. “She also happens to live in affordable housing and is a renter, that is a perspective we do not have on our council.”