It’s Their Own Fault We No Longer Default to Respect
There Was a Horrific School Shooting in Canada...and Their Police Used a Weird...
Person of Interest Arrested in Connection to the Abduction of Nancy Guthrie
Fraud Nation
Technological Sweet Spot
Public Opinion: A Tyrant Against Hard Decisions
Peggy Noonan Loses Her Noodle Over Washington Post Layoffs
Misconduct Rampant: America’s Leaders Increasingly Prioritize Agendas Over Fairness, Laws
Pass the SAVE America Act
Trump's DOJ Seeks Justice for Victims of Benghazi
2026 Olympics: Let’s Talk About Crotch Scandals
The Washington Post Is Paying the Bill for Free Speech
Republicans Siding With Big Banks in Stablecoin Fight Could Tank Trump’s Affordability Age...
Freezing Deaths, Garbage Piles in Largest Sanctuary City
Woke DC Grand Jury Denies Indictments of Six Democrats Accused of Sedition
Tipsheet

'Real Indian' Running Against Liz Warren in Massachusetts

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D) is known to many Trump supporters as "Pocahontas." The president gave her the nickname because she has claimed to have Native American heritage. Reports suggest she used the heritage to secure a job as a tenured professor at Harvard, including making unsubstantiated claims about Cherokee ancestry.

Advertisement

The senator defended her purported family tree at a speech before the National Congress of American Indians in February, noting that her mother's family was part Native American.

“The story they lived will always be a part of me,” she said. “And no one — not even the president of the United States — will ever take that part of me away.”

A self-described "Real Indian," Shiva Ayyadurai is challenging Warren's ethnic credentials - and her Senate seat - in the race for the midterms.

Ayyadurai, who was born in Bombay, India, is reminding voters about the Warren controversy by posting a slogan on the side of his campaign bus that reads, "Only a REAL INDIAN Can Defeat the Fake Indian." The bus is parked in front of an office building owned by Ayyadurai, only a mile from Warren's home. When officials demanded he take down the signs, he sued, charging they were violating his constitutional free speech rights.

Advertisement

“We will not remove the slogan from our bus,” Ayyadurai told the Washington Times. “We will defend the First Amendment, and we will fight this egregious attack on the First Amendment, at any cost.”

The city building inspector has threatened $300 in daily fines should Ayyadurai refuse to remove the signs. The candidate, however, said the threat is moot because a bus is not a building. He smells a political agenda.

“This is a political vendetta by City officials who are supporters of Elizabeth Warren.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos