Hijab Wearing New Jersey Governor Nowhere to Be Found on Palm Sunday

Mikie Sherrill’s Ramadan Hijab and Palm Sunday Silence: Selective Faith for Political Gain?

New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill has never been shy about showcasing her solidarity with the state’s Muslim community. During Ramadan and the Eid al-Fitr celebrations that concluded in mid-March, she made sure the cameras were rolling. Sherrill visited mosques, posed for selfies in a traditional hijab, and posted warmly on social media: “Assalamu Alaikum and Eid Mubarak, New Jersey!”

The images circulated widely—governor in headscarf, breaking bread with local Muslim leaders, emphasizing inclusion and respect.

Hijab wearing new jersey governor nowhere to be found on palm sunday

Public appearances during Ramadan draw attention

That was then.

This past weekend, on the eve of Palm Sunday—the Christian holy day that opens Holy Week and commemorates Jesus’ entry into Jerusalem—Governor Sherrill was otherwise occupied. She delivered remarks at a “No Kings” rally in Princeton on Saturday, March 28, railing against the current administration in standard partisan fashion. By Palm Sunday itself, March 29, she was reportedly still recovering. Fair enough; politicians get tired too.

What’s striking, however, is what came next—or rather, what didn’t. A thorough search of Governor Sherrill’s official channels—her Facebook page, Instagram, and X account—turned up zero posts celebrating Palm Sunday. No photos from any church service. No messages of faith offered to New Jersey’s Christian communities. No acknowledgment whatsoever of the millions of residents who observe Holy Week.

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Instead, her feed continued its familiar drumbeat: anti-Trump broadsides and routine self-promotion.

We looked. Hard. Nothing.

Absence of Palm Sunday message raises questions

This is not about whether a governor must attend every religious observance on the calendar. Public officials cannot be everywhere, and New Jersey is a diverse state with many faiths and none. But the contrast is impossible to ignore.

Hijab wearing new jersey governor nowhere to be found on palm sunday
Photo: hijab wearing new jersey governor nowhere to be found on palm sunday

When it came to Ramadan, Sherrill didn’t just show up—she amplified the moment with visible, culturally specific gestures and public messaging. When it came to one of Christianity’s most important days, she offered radio silence.

New Jersey is home to roughly 3 million Christians—Catholics, Protestants, evangelicals, and others—who make up a clear majority of the population. They are not a niche interest group or a political afterthought. Yet in Sherrill’s public calendar and digital footprint, their major holy day apparently warranted no recognition at all.

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One is tempted to ask the obvious question: What gives?

Broader debate over political outreach and faith

This isn’t the first time a politician has been accused of curating religious engagement for maximum political effect. Photo-ops with one community can signal “tolerance” and secure votes in key demographics; silence toward another community costs nothing if that group is taken for granted.

But optics like these erode trust. When elected leaders appear eager to don the hijab for Eid but can’t muster even a generic Palm Sunday greeting for their Christian constituents, it looks less like principled pluralism and more like calculated pandering.

Governor Sherrill is a former Navy helicopter pilot and federal prosecutor who once presented herself as a pragmatic moderate. New Jerseyans deserve better than identity-driven symbolism that picks and chooses which faiths merit public celebration.

Consistency matters. Respect for all traditions—or at least basic recognition of the state’s largest one—should not be optional depending on the calendar or the rally schedule.

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If Sherrill truly values religious liberty and cultural inclusion, her office should reflect that evenly, not selectively. Palm Sunday came and went without a word. Christians in New Jersey noticed. So should everyone else who expects their governor to represent all her constituents, not just the ones that photograph well.

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