Politics

Illinois Grassroots Bid: How Neil Khot Fights for Affordability and Immigrants

Illinois Grassroots Bid: How Neil Khot Fights for Affordability and Immigrants

Indian American entrepreneur Neil Khot is running for Congress in Illinois. His campaign is driven by voters' top concerns: skyrocketing living costs and anxiety over immigration enforcement. He's positioning himself as a community-focused outsider, not a career politician, who will fight for families and small businesses. Khot aims to retain this Democratic seat being vacated by Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is running for Senate.

Indian American entrepreneur Neil Khot launches a grassroots Democratic campaign for Illinois' 8th District, focusing on living costs, immigration fears, and protecting Social Security.

Rising living costs, immigration anxiety, job losses and concerns over cuts to Social Security and Medicare are shaping Indian American entrepreneur Neil Khot’s campaign for the US House of Representatives from Illinois’ 8th Congressional District, as he mounts a grassroots Democratic bid to retain a seat being vacated by Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi.

Khot said conversations with voters across the district have consistently pointed to economic pressure and uncertainty. “People are worried that they are insurance premiums are going up,” he said. “Interest rates are very high. So there is unaffordability in the society. People cannot afford housing. People cannot afford day-to-day groceries.” He added that business owners are unsettled by trade policy uncertainty, saying there is “no proper tariff position, so they don't know what steps to take,” he told IANS in an interview.

Immigration enforcement has emerged as another defining issue, according to Khot. “People are worried. Business people are worried that they've been dragged, kidnapped and taken,” he said, referring to fears around immigration raids. As a first-generation immigrant, Khot said the issue is deeply personal. “We never, ever have to go through this feeling that the current government has made us go through that America is not welcoming,” he said. “America should be welcoming. That's what they did to me.”

Khot said protecting seniors is central to his agenda, warning against reductions to entitlement programs. “For my seniors, I want to fight to make sure Medicare and Social Security are not cut down,” he said, adding that benefits such as SNAP and healthcare should also be safeguarded. “In the richest country, we should not have healthcare bankrupt people and families.”

Presenting himself as an outsider to Washington politics, Khot stressed that he is “not a career politician” but a “small business entrepreneur” with decades of community involvement. He said his campaign is focused on “fighting for immigrants, fighting for the hardworking families,” while ensuring “business people have the right opportunity to make sure that they can run proper businesses.”

The Democratic primary is scheduled for March 17, and Khot said his campaign, now about eight months old, has already secured a place on the ballot. “Our campaign is a grassroots campaign. It's a campaign that's gonna support our community,” he said, adding that voter outreach has begun across the district’s nearly 25 villages and eight townships. Television advertising, mailers and expanded field operations are set to begin in mid-January.

Khot outlined the district’s demographic makeup as a key factor in his strategy. He said the constituency has about 750,000 residents, with roughly 60 per cent white voters, about 24 per cent Hispanic or South American residents, and between 12 and 16 per cent South Asians, alongside smaller numbers of other minorities. “Most of our voters are going to be about the age of 50 and above,” he said. “That's a major dynamic of this entire district.”

He said his approach is to build support across communities, with particular emphasis on white voters, followed by Hispanic and South Asian residents. Fundraising and volunteer support, he added, have come from across the country, including California, Washington, DC, Atlanta, Chicago and the Midwest. “We need representation,” Khot said, describing national backing as important for Indian American and South Asian communities.