Republican Hindu Coalition-backed candidate disqualified in Congressional primary poll

IANS  |  New York 

A candidate backed by the (RHC), Vandana Jhingan, who wanted to challenge an Indian is off the ballot after officials said they found irregularities in her nominating petition.

But her lawyer, Jeffrey Meyer, said on Monday she is appealing the ruling.

The November from the constituency covering some suburbs could be a contest between the sitting Democratic Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is unchallenged in the March 20 primary, and Jitendra Diganvker, who is now the only one on the Republican ballot, if she is not reinstated.

Officials of the State Board of Elections declared that did not have enough valid signatures on her nominating petition to be on the ballot after they invalidated over 1,250 of them ruling they were not collected properly.

"It was an absolutely absurd ruling," Jon Zahm, her told IANS. "It was not based on facts and they came up with a crazy theory."

Under the election system in Illinois, candidates have to first run in the elections where registered members of their respective parties vote for the candidate to represent their parties in the

In the constituency known as District, 8 whites make up 70 per cent of the population and only 12 per cent is Asian, a category that includes Indians.

Krishnamoorthi is the first non-white person to be elected from the constituency that is traditionally a bastion.

The terms of Representatives is only two years, requiring Krishnamoorthi, who was elected in 2016, to run for reelection in November.

He is one of four Indian-Americans in the House of Representatives, all of them Democrats.

Kamala Harris, the sole of Indian descent, is also a Democrat.

Krishnamoorthi is a and a former technology and Diganvker is a with a business.

is the for the India-oriented American TV channel TV

She announced on her that her "candidacy is supported by the (RHC), the nation's most powerful Republican Hindu organisation, which has raised millions for the and leadership in and Illinois" and that it is committed to giving her "significant financial support."

Her nomination was challenged by represented by

Scott Erman, the who heard the challenge, wrote that was "purposely evasive" during her questioning and her testimony was "not credible."

He also questioned the credibility of some of those who had collected signatures on the nominating petition and said that the filings by her mother, Chenchal "contained false swearings."

Zahm denied the allegations, saying, "They came up with a crazy theory that Vandana and her mother and her husband and her friend did not witness the circulation of the petitions."

"However, they were not able to produce any conclusive evidence of that absurd theory," he added. "Our group came up with 59 affidavits that they did witness the signatures going on to the petition pages. The totally ignored the evidence."

Meyer wrote in an email to IANS that the appeal against the decision was filed on January 29 in the in

While was campaigning for last year, he attended an election rally organised for him by the RHC -- the first time a reached out directly to the Indian community.

Shalabh Kumar, who with his wife contributed over $1 million to Trump's election campaign last year, is the of the RHC.

In addition he gave $1 million to the festivities around Trump's January swearing-in, according to

(can be reached at arul.l@ians.in)

--IANS

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(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, February 06 2018. 08:02 IST