About Japneet Singh
Japneet Singh isn’t your typical candidate—and that’s exactly why he’s running. A lifelong Queens resident and community advocate, Japneet has spent years fighting for fairness, equity, and transparency across District 28. While others made excuses, he showed up—delivering food to families in need, standing with tenants against slumlords, mentoring youth, and pushing government agencies to do their jobs.
He’s not backed by political insiders or machine politics. He’s one of us—someone who knows firsthand what it means to be ignored by a system that’s supposed to work for us.
A Fighter for What We Deserve
Public Servant, Not a Career Politician
Japneet’s experience isn’t just grassroots—it’s in government, too. He worked in the Office of the Public Advocate, where he helped everyday New Yorkers navigate city agencies and hold them accountable. He’s fought for change from both inside and outside the system—delivering results, not just rhetoric.
A Coalition That Reflects Our Community
Japneet’s campaign isn’t about one group—it’s about all of us. His coalition includes Black, Latino, South Asian, immigrant, and working-class families who share one belief: we deserve better. Together, they’re building a people-powered movement to challenge the status quo and finally bring District 28 the attention and investment it deserves.
Why He’s Running
For decades, our community has faced broken promises. A senior center at NYCHA that never came. Affordable housing that was never built. Schools that are still underfunded.
Japneet is running because he’s tired of seeing politicians talk about change while doing nothing to make it happen. He’s running because we deserve leadership that delivers.
“I’ve spent my life fighting for our community—not just during election season. I’m not here for politics—I’m here for the people.”
— Japneet Singh
Grounded in Service. Ready to Lead.
From organizing mutual aid to pushing city hall for answers, Japneet has always led by showing up and stepping up. His campaign is about action, accountability, and getting real results—because our community can’t afford more of the same.