Why Indian Americans are shifting right – and poised to serve in top Trump roles

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For decades, Democrats could count on votes from Indian Americans, a fast-growing immigrant population with high turnout rates at elections.

Now, that political alignment may be in flux. As the United States moved right in November’s election amid discontent over the economy and immigration, cracks have appeared in what was a bedrock of support.

Why We Wrote This

President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of several Indian Americans to high-profile posts is emblematic of a rightward shift among this highly educated, affluent voting group.

“While we didn’t see much of a shift [toward Donald Trump] in 2020, we certainly saw one in 2024 … so this could be a turning point,” says Milan Vaishnav, the director of the South Asia program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Since the election, the president-elect has nominated Indian Americans to prominent positions in his administration. These include Jay Bhattacharya as director of the National Institutes of Health and Kash Patel as his nominee to lead the FBI. Vice President JD Vance’s wife, Usha Vance, will also make history as the first Indian American second lady.     

A preelection survey of Indian Americans by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace found that nearly 1 in 3 respondents planned to vote for Mr. Trump, up from 22% in a similar poll in 2020. 

For decades, Democrats could count on votes from Indian Americans, a fast-growing immigrant population with high turnout rates at elections. More educated and more affluent on average than other immigrant groups, Americans of Indian descent seemed a natural fit for a progressive party that likes to tout its multiracial, multi-faith coalition.

Now, that political alignment may be in flux. As the United States moved right in November’s election amid discontent over the economy and immigration, cracks have appeared in what was a bedrock of support. In districts in California and New York where many Indian American and other Asian immigrants live, Donald Trump and other Republican candidates far outperformed expectations, in part by running against Democratic policies in those states.

Since the election, in which Mr. Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris, who is Black and of Indian descent, the president-elect has named Indian Americans to prominent positions in his administration. These include Jay Bhattacharya as nominee for director of the National Institutes of Health, Harmeet Dhillon to run the Civil Rights Division at the Department of Justice, Kash Patel as his nominee to lead the FBI, Sriram Krishnan as senior White House policy advisor for artificial intelligence, and Vivek Ramaswamy as co-chair of the new Department of Government Efficiency. Vice President JD Vance’s wife, Usha Vance, will also make history as the first Indian American second lady.

Why We Wrote This

President-elect Donald Trump’s nomination of several Indian Americans to high-profile posts is emblematic of a rightward shift among this highly educated, affluent voting group.

These high-profile roles, and the partisan swing in 2024, raise the question of whether Republicans can build on their growing popularity among Indian Americans. Roughly 70% of Indian immigrants to the U.S. have arrived since 2000 and are known as the IT Generation because many moved to study and find jobs in the U.S. technology industry.

Usha Vance speaks during the Republican National Convention, July 17, 2024, in Milwaukee.

This generation may be less tethered to the Democratic Party than their predecessors who arrived in the 1970s and 1980s. Republicans hope to win them over, in part by taking on affirmative action and other Democratic policies pushed by the party’s left that are seen as counter to the meritocratic promise held out to new immigrants.

“I hope President Trump will deliver on the promises that he put [forward], because those are Indian American values. Focus on meritocracy, focus on education, focus on national security, focus on family and faith,” says Srilekha Palle, a health care administrator and political consultant in Virginia who chairs Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s Asian Advisory Board.

Tracking GOP gains with Indian Americans

Analysts are waiting for more voting data to see exactly how Indian Americans and other Asian minorities voted in 2024. But preelection polls and precinct voting patterns point to a small but significant shift among Indian Americans, one that adds to Democratic concerns about sagging support from Latinos and other demographic groups that make up a growing share of the electorate. Indian Americans, who number 4.8 million, are now the second-largest immigrant group in the U.S. after Mexican Americans.

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