Iowa Democratic state Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott garnered criticism after remarks in a recent interview in which she argued that the state’s elected leadership is too white, male, and Christian.
Garriott, an ordained minister in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America who is now running for Congress in Iowa’s 3rd District, made the comments during a YouTube interview with Sebastian Onofre. When asked what motivated her to seek federal office, she said she was inspired in part by a desire to see more diverse representation in government.
“I just wanted different kinds of people to be in leadership,” Garriott said, explaining that she was encouraged by female peers who had previously run for office. “I realized I was frustrated about some things about our state government. I thought, that’s not fair for someone else to fix it; maybe I should step up and make the change I wanted to see.”
She added that Iowa’s leadership remains “not a very diverse group” and described it as “mostly white, mostly Christian, mostly older men,” saying that presents “tremendous opportunities to get different types of people who represent our community into leadership positions.”
DEI and “White Patriarchy” Comments
Garriott has been outspoken in support of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. When the Iowa Senate voted to ban DEI offices, staff, and programs in state government and public colleges, she argued the measure would harm the state and undermine workforce development efforts.
In a separate address to the Iowa Conference of the United Methodist Church, Garriott criticized what she described as “white patriarchy,” which she characterized as rooted in “masculine power, violence and dominance.” She linked those themes to what she called the rise of Christian nationalism and encouraged faith communities to build relationships across differences and ensure broader civic participation.
During that same speech, she said movements advocating for LGBT rights challenge traditional power structures, describing them as “very threatening to the idea of the white, male, powerful figure.”
Political Backlash
Garriott’s comments elicited swift condemnation from Republicans. Republican National Committee spokesman Zach Kraft criticized her record and rhetoric, calling her a “woke warrior” and accusing her of prioritizing DEI initiatives over other issues.
“From bashing white men to leading the fight to waste tax dollars on DEI in the Iowa Senate, Sarah Trone Garriott has built a career on being a woke warrior,” Kraft said in a statement. “Iowans want nothing to do with this radical left-wing nutjob and will soundly reject her and her ideas.”
Garriott has not responded publicly to the latest criticism but has consistently framed her campaign as focused on inclusion, representation, and what she views as structural inequities in state government.
As the race for Iowa’s 3rd Congressional District heats up, her remarks are likely to remain a focal point in the broader debate over identity, representation, and the role of DEI policies in public institutions.
Iowa’s Demographic Landscape
According to recent U.S. Census estimates, Iowa’s population is roughly 85–90% non-Hispanic white, with growing Hispanic and Latino communities and smaller percentages of Black, Asian, and multiracial residents. The state is also more rural and older than the national average, with a median age above that of the United States as a whole. Religiously, Iowa has a significant Christian majority, with Protestant and Catholic traditions representing a large share of active congregations, though religious affiliation has declined in recent years in line with national trends.
READ NEXT: Democrats Flip Iowa State Senate Seat Ending GOP Supermajority






Wheres the out cry about racism, O that’s right their white so there is no racism
How can they take over if the State is still run by only American Citizens?
🙂
I would vote for any number of minority groups for a political position, on these conditions:
1. They are accomplished members of the state’s business community. Politics should NOT be their primary job. Working in the community, or retired from the working community is where they prove their worth.
2. They are not committed to promoting a socialist government. Socialism is NOT compatible with a democratic republic.
3. They are not committed to pandering to a small set of community that are hyper focused on anything with a hyper sexual lifestyle focus.
4. They are not committed to pandering to promoting a subset of the American culture that are hyper focused on anything other than ALL Americans.
5. They promote the American culture first and foremost as demonstrated by an OATH to America, the Constitution, and making every American’s life better.
What is Sen. Sarah Trone Garriott implying here with: “the state’s elected leadership is too white, male, and Christian?”
I suspect the general failure of colored leadership leads the list of reasons, elections can’t be changed simply to satisfy gender and if not Christians, then who? America is getting fed up with islam
and under no circumstances except at the point of a gun, will Sharia Law ever be accepted here. Atheists and agnostics are okay because they don’t cut peoples heads off if they disagree.