Mazi Melesa Pilip | |
---|---|
Member of the Nassau County Legislature from the 10th district | |
Assumed office January 1, 2022 | |
Preceded by | Ellen Birnbaum |
Personal details | |
Born | 1978or1979(age 44–45) Ethiopia |
Citizenship |
|
Political party | Republican (before 2012, 2024–present) [1] Democratic (2012–2024) [lower-alpha 1] |
Other political affiliations | Republican Caucus (2022–present) |
Spouse | Adalbert Pilip (m. 2005) |
Children | 7 |
Education | University of Haifa (BA) Tel Aviv University (MA) |
Website | County website Campaign website |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Israel |
Branch/service | Israel Defense Forces |
Unit | Paratroopers Brigade |
Mazi Melesa Pilip [lower-alpha 2] (born 1978or1979) [3] is an American politician serving in New York's Nassau County Legislature. She represents Nassau County, Long Island's 10th district as a Republican. She is an Ethiopian Jew who immigrated to Israel when she was 12 years old, and later served in the Israel Defense Force's Paratroopers Brigade as a gunsmith. Pilip studied at the University of Haifa, where she earned a bachelor's degree in occupational therapy, and also at Tel Aviv University, where she earned a masters degree in diplomacy and security. She immigrated to the United States in 2005.
In 2021 and again in 2023, Pilip was elected to the Nassau County Legislature. She has been a registered Democrat since 2012, but ran for the legislature on the Republican ballot line. [4] She was the Republican nominee for the United States House of Representatives New York 3rd congressional district special election in February 2024 for the seat vacated by George Santos, losing to Democrat Tom Suozzi. [5] [6]
Pilip was born in extreme poverty in a small village in rural Ethiopia that did not have electricity or running water, and is an Ethiopian Jew. [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] She immigrated to Israel in 1991 as a refugee when she was 12 years old, along with her family, as part of Operation Solomon. [12] [11] The operation was an Israeli military operation that covertly airlifted over 14,000 Ethiopian Jews to Israel in a day and a half. [11] [10] She has three sisters, all of whom live in Israel, and one of whom is a detective. [13] [14]
Upon turning 18 years of age, she served Israel's mandatory military service in the Israel Defense Force's Paratroopers Brigade (Tzanchanim) as a gunsmith. [9] [11] [15] After her service in the army, Pilip studied at the University of Haifa, where she was chairwoman of the Ethiopian Student Union for two years, and earned a bachelor's degree in occupational therapy. [9] [13] [10] [12] She also studied at Tel Aviv University, earning a masters degree in diplomacy and security. [9] [13] [10] [12]
While at the University of Haifa she met her future husband, Adalbert Pilip, who had been born in Ukraine. [7] He was an American-Ukrainian-Jewish medical student from a family of Holocaust survivors who had come from the United States to Haifa to study medicine at the Technion, later becoming a cardiologist. [10] [11] [12]
After she and her husband married, they moved to the United States in 2005, ultimately settling in Great Neck, New York. [11] [10] [7] She is an Orthodox Jew, has been vice president of her synagogue (Kol Yisrael Achim), and has been active in trying to revitalize Great Neck and in speaking about Israel for Jewish groups. [12] She and her husband have seven children. [12] [16]
In November 2021, Pilip was elected to New York's Nassau County Legislature as a Republican legislator for Nassau County, Long Island's 10th district, flipping it by defeating four-term incumbent Democrat Ellen Birnbaum by seven percentage points. [17] [3] [10] [11] [18] The district covers Manhasset, Manhasset Hills, North Hills, Searingtown, Herricks, and the nine villages on the Great Neck peninsula, and is just east of New York City. [19] [20] She gave birth to twin daughters weeks before the election. [12]
Pilip campaigned on reviving Great Neck's downtown, and acting as a bridge among the many minority communities in the district. [12] [20] [21] She became the first-ever Republican from Great Neck to be elected a Nassau County Legislator. [22] [23] Her priorities have also included public safety, helping businesses that struggled during the COVID-19 pandemic, and fighting antisemitism. [24] [10] [12] She is chairwoman of the Nassau County Legislature Towns, Villages & Cities Committee, and vice chairwoman of its Health & Social Services Committee. [25]
In November 2023, she won a second term as Nassau County legislator representing District 10 as a Republican (endorsed by the Conservative Party), defeating Democratic challenger Weihua Yan by a margin of 60% to 40%. [26] [27] She had been endorsed by the New York League of Conservation Voters, which cited her driving legislation transferring county land to the Great Neck Park District, approving funding for a streets initiative and water quality protection, and supporting efforts to protect the county's sole source aquifer. [28] Conservative donor and former US Ambassador to Austria Ronald Lauder was her biggest single donor during her race. [29] She dedicated her win to Israel. [27]
As early as January 2023, Pilip was considered for a position that might become vacant in the United States Congress. [11] George Santos had been elected in 2022 to represent New York's 3rd congressional district in the 118th United States Congress. [11] In December 2023, Santos was expelled from Congress, leaving his seat vacant. [11] In January 2023, Politico reporter Olivia Beavers wrote that Pilip was one of two Republicans whom the Nassau County Republican Party was considering recruiting if Santos were to resign. [11] [12] The Nassau County legislative district that Pilip represented was part of the 3rd congressional district. [30]
On December 14, 2023, a panel of Republicans from Queens and Nassau Counties selected Pilip as the Republican nominee in the special election scheduled for February 13, 2024 to succeed Santos after his expulsion. [5] The panel chose her after considering more than 20 candidates. [31] [32] Her opponent in the general election was Tom Suozzi, who had previously represented the district in Congress. [6]
Pilip was a registered Democrat, although she held office as a Republican and has adopted traditional Republican positions on certain issues. [2] HuffPost reported that if elected she would be the only Black Republican women in the current Congress and the first Black Jew. [17] She was criticized by her opponent for agreeing to participate in only one debate during the campaign, after early voting started. [33] [34] The campaign was largely fought on the issue migration into the United States. [35]
Pilip lost the special election to Suozzi, who will serve out the remainder of Santos's original two-year term in the House, which expires on January 3, 2025. [6]
Pilip has said, "abortion is a very personal decision", and "I am pro-life. However, I'm not going to push my own beliefs on any woman". [36] [37] She has said that she would not support a national abortion ban. [36] [37] [38] However, she has refused to answer questions asking for specific stances on restoring Roe v. Wade, or how she would vote on potential restrictions that fall short of a national ban. [39]
Pilip has spoken out against antisemitism in the United States, and in particular antisemitism on American college campuses. [40] [41] [42]
Pilip has made combatting rising crime rates and improving public safety a key focus of her platform, and cites it as a motivator for her campaign. [7] [43]
When an audience member during a debate asked Pilip and Tom Suozzi whether they support a ban on the type of assault weapons frequently used in mass shootings, Pilip said, "I don't see any reason why the average American or individual would have more powerful weapons than our cops" but did not answer whether she supported banning semiautomatic weapons like AR-15s. [39]
Support for Israel is viewed as a key issue in New York's 3rd congressional district, with both candidates underlining their support. Pilip is a former gunsmith who served in the Paratroopers Brigade of the IDF, and is a staunch supporter of Israel and its military actions. [44] She vocally supported Israel's response to the October 7 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, stating that Israel had an "obligation" to protect its civilians from terrorists. [45]
Pilip is in favor of taxes being low, and views taxes as one of the main issues for the district. [46] [47] [48]
Regarding the multiple indictments facing Donald Trump, Pilip has said: "Trump has to go through his process" and "No one's above the law. We have great candidates right now. Trump is one of them. We'll wait and see. Whoever the nominee is, we'll support him all the way." [49] [50] She added that she would not support Trump for president if he is convicted of a crime. [51]
Pilip is in favor of continued U.S. support for Ukraine in its war against Russia. [52] [53]
Pilip is opposed to the 2024 U.S. Senate bill to address the Mexico–United States border crisis, saying its passage would amount to "the legalization of the invasion of our country". [54] "Joe Biden and Tom Suozzi have brought the border crisis to our front door", Pilip said when receiving the endorsement of the labor union National Border Patrol Council in February 2024. [55] [56]
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