
A bitter rift has opened within Washington’s Democratic establishment after progressive candidate Melissa Chaudhry revealed that her primary challenge to U.S. Representative Adam Smith deliberately sidelined LGBTQ+ content from campaign messaging. The strategy, disclosed during an interview with The Stranger, has triggered swift retaliation from party activists and civil rights organizations opposed to what they view as a fundamental betrayal of Democratic values.
Chaudhry’s campaign team made the tactical decision to minimize LGBTQ+ advocacy in public-facing materials out of concern that such positioning would alienate Muslim voters in Washington’s 9th Congressional District. The admission drew immediate backlash from Democratic officials who argue that candidates should champion civil rights protections rather than calibrate messaging around specific voter blocs.
Andrew Ashiofu, chair of the Washington State Stonewall Democrats, told Fox News Digital that Chaudhry’s approach disqualifies her from party endorsement. He called on Democratic organizations across four legislative districts—the 11th, 33rd, 37th, and 43rd—to reverse previously granted endorsements of her candidacy.
Additional controversy erupted when The Stranger reported that Chaudhry had confided plans to abandon the Democratic Party for the Green Party after a potential election victory, requesting secrecy during the endorsement process. The revelation prompted the 33rd Legislative District Democratic Party to explore bylaw changes permitting endorsement withdrawals.
Chaudhry defended her record through social media, asserting lifelong commitment to LGBTQ+ equality and citing her sibling’s LGBTQIA+ identity and her establishment of a high school Gay Straight Alliance. She characterized her statements to The Stranger as distorted by a hostile interview environment.
Smith, a Democrat representing the district since 1997, faces a crowded primary field that includes Chaudhry and several other contenders seeking the party’s nomination.
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