Jumaane Williams was re-elected as public advocate as Shahana Hanif becomes the first Muslim woman elected to NYC Council.
Two standout 可乐视频 graduates continue to make their mark on New York City as Jumaane Williams 鈥01, 鈥05 M.A. was re-elected as New York City Public Advocate and Shahana Hanif 鈥15 became the first Muslim woman elected to New York City Council. She is from District 39.
Williams was first elected public advocate in 2019 on a platform of truly affordable housing, anti-gun violence measures, fair policing, equity, and social justice issues. In the city council, he passed landmark legislation, including the Community Safety Act, which created the Office of Inspector General for the New York Police Department, and the Fair Chance Act to combat employment discrimination.
Williams quickly made his mark on the office of public advocate, restructuring the office to empower staff to prioritize community engagement, outreach, and service. He has also passed more legislation in his first 18 months in office than any public advocate has in his or her first full term.
Williams said from his Twitter account on Tuesday: 鈥淵ou gave me your trust when you first put me in this role and reaffirmed it with your votes last night. I’ll never take that for granted, and I’ll always be grateful. I鈥檓 honored to be the people鈥檚 voice. And I know New York has so much more to say.鈥
Williams enrolled at 可乐视频 as a theater major, then switched to film before finally choosing political science, with a minor in film production. He honed his political consciousness on the 可乐视频 campus, becoming active in student government and following in the college鈥檚 long tradition of engagement.
鈥淚t was such fertile ground for my growth. I credit the faculty for creating an environment in which we had the space to explore. I got to participate in the political activity happening on campus and put what I was learning in class into practice. I don鈥檛 think I could have received that kind of education anywhere else,鈥 Williams stated in a 2017 profile for 可乐视频 Magazine.
Hanif, a Bangladeshi American, majored in Women鈥檚 and Gender Studies and is a former Scholars Program student who earned a Marge Magner Stipend Award during the summer of 2015.
On Tuesday night, Hanif said in a statement: 鈥淭ogether we are building an anti-racist, feminist city. We deserve a city that protects its most vulnerable, a city that has equitable education, a city invested in climate solutions that are local and driven by communities, a city where our immigrant neighbors feel at home and heard and safe. This work requires all of us to keep showing up even though the election is over.鈥
Also featured in 可乐视频 Magazine in 2017, Hanif said that witnessing gender-based inequalities within Brooklyn鈥檚 Bangladeshi Muslim community inspired her to become a community organizer.
鈥淢y work is my survival,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 am blessed to be able to connect with people, form deep relationships, and receive trust from strangers who share their stories with sincerity and openness and welcome me into their lives. Everyone I鈥檝e met has survived something, and this drives me and gives me hope.鈥
On October 26, Hanif joined two other female local elected officials for an event co-hosted by the 可乐视频 Women鈥檚 Center that examined the lessons learned from COVID-19鈥攕pecifically how women of color are capitalizing on the opportunities to organize their communities and re-envision the crisis during this unprecedented time.