Sultana was listed fifth of seven among the Labour candidates for the 2019 European Parliament elections in the West Midlands constituency, meaning that she would be elected if Labour received enough votes in the region to appoint five MEPs. She was not elected, as Labour won only one MEP in the constituency.[15][16]
During the 2019 election campaign, The Jewish Chronicle reported that in 2015, whilst she was a student, Sultana made social media posts from a subsequently deleted account which implied that she would celebrate the deaths of the former Labour prime ministerTony Blair, Israeli prime ministerBenjamin Netanyahu and former US PresidentGeorge W. Bush and she supported "violent resistance" by Palestinians.[12] As a teenager, Sultana sent tweets telling someone whom she described as pro-Israel to "jump off a cliff" and compared the Holocaust to those who were killed in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Chechnya. In tweets, Sultana used slang phrases for white people—"YT" and "the white woman"—to describe some Jewish people.[21] Sultana apologised for the posts and stated that she no longer held those views and "wrote them out of frustration rather than any malice".[22][23] The Labour Party re-interviewed her as a consequence of the posts, but she remained the party's candidate.[24] After her election, The Jewish Chronicle reported on a further social media post made by Sultana in 2015, in which she stated that students supporting Zionism were "advocating a racist ideology...and champion[ing] a state created through ethnic cleansing, sustained through occupation, apartheid and war crimes."[25]
In December 2020, UNICEF announced that it would provide £25,000 to the charity School Food Matters so that vulnerable children and families in Southwark could be supplied with thousands of breakfast boxes over the Christmas school holidays. In parliament Sultana said that it was the first time UNICEF had been required to "feed working-class kids in the UK. But while children go hungry, a wealthy few enjoy obscene riches". She mentioned that Jacob Rees-Mogg is "reportedly in line to receive an £800,000 dividend payout this year". Rees-Mogg criticised UNICEF's action and called it "a political stunt of the lowest order". Sultana then sent Rees-Mogg a copy of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol, writing inside "Jacob, it seems this wasn't on Eton's reading list. Merry Christmas, Zarah".[33][34]
In January 2021, Sultana called for prisoners to be prioritised for COVID-19 vaccinations, describing them as "a high risk setting for transmission" and as such, it would be a "humane approach to a completely disenfranchised population".[35]
In April 2021, Sultana was profiled by Marie Le Conte for Vogue magazine, along with her Labour colleagues Charlotte Nichols, Taiwo Owatemi, and Sarah Owen. She spoke about the abuse she receives as a Muslim and as a woman of colour, including death threats and being told to 'go back to her own country'. Sultana was described as "one of the most left-wing new Labour MPs" who had "made a name for herself as an outspoken critic of the Government".[5] In September 2021, Sultana broke down in tears during a debate in Parliament recounting the "Islamophobic hate" she had been subject to since being elected.[36]
In May 2021, alongside celebrities and other public figures, Sultana was a signatory to an open letter from Stylist magazine which called on the government to address what it described as an "epidemic of male violence" by funding an "ongoing, high-profile, expert-informed awareness campaign on men's violence against women and girls".[37]
In September 2021, Sultana chaired the Fire Brigade Union's Climate Catastrophe: The Case for a Socialist Green New Deal fringe event at the Labour Party conference.[38] In October 2021, she joined cross-party MPs including Caroline Lucas and Clive Lewis to launch the Green New Deal Bill in Parliament, "a game-changing plan to stop climate change and build a world in which we can thrive", which she described in a LabourList article as having "social justice at its heart, putting the interests of the many ahead of the greed of the few."[39][40]
On 24 February 2022, following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Sultana was one of 11 Labour MPs threatened with losing the party whip after they signed a statement by the Stop the War Coalition which questioned the legitimacy of NATO and accused the alliance of "eastward expansion". All 11 MPs subsequently removed their signatures.[41] After receiving a death threat, she criticised what she described as "inaccurate" reports by the media for creating "an active danger to the safety of public figures, and threaten[ing] to narrow our democracy". In a statement to The Guardian she said that she "unequivocally condemned" the actions of the Russian government in Ukraine. She also criticised an anonymous Labour source who described the 11 MPs as a "mouthpiece for the Kremlin", and said that she had complained to party chair Anneliese Dodds about party sources disseminating "dangerous and irresponsible messages".[42][43]
In March 2022 Sultana pledged to donate her upcoming £2,212 pay rise to Coventry Foodbank and local charities in the city "supporting refugees, to help Ukrainians and all those fleeing brutal war".[44] She also organised a crowd funding campaign for Coventry Foodbank which raised £10,000,[45] which equated to over five tonnes of food.[46] She delivered a speech in Parliament on the cost of living crisis in May 2022.[47]
In October 2022, Sultana was reselected as the Labour Party MP for her constituency,[48] after receiving 90% of the vote from six local branches of the party and support from all participating affiliate organisations.[49] In November 2022 she addressed the picket line during the University and College Union (UCU) strikes on the University of Warwick campus.[50]
In December 2022, Sultana introduced a Ten Minute Rule bill to Parliament that would extend free school meals to all primary school pupils, titled the "Free School Meals for All Bill".[51] It was supported by the National Education Union’s No Child Left Behind campaign.[52]
At the general election in 2024, Sultana was re-elected and increased her majority from 401 to over 10,000, receiving 20,361 votes.[55] She was featured in a Vogue article about 13 female Labour MPs who were elected.[56]
During the Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip, she developed a significant media presence commenting on the situation in Gaza and UK arms exports to Israel. During this time she has become the MP receiving the most death threats and online abuse.[8][57]
On 23 July 2024, she, along with six other Labour MPs, had the whip withdrawn for six months for voting against the government and in favour of a Scottish National Party amendment to end the two child benefit cap.[58][59][60] She said that “I have to stand up for what I believe are the true values of the Labour Party and in doing so I've made difficult decisions in terms of defying the whip."[61]
In September 2024, Sultana voted against the Labour government and in favour of a motion to block the proposed cut in winter fuel payment.[61]
Recognition
In March 2022, Sultana received an MP of the Year Award from the Patchwork Foundation, celebrating her work championing "underrepresented and disadvantaged communities across the UK."[62] She also presented the Campaigner of the Year award at the PinkNews Awards, to Nemat Sadat, an Afghan-American queer activist and novelist.[63]
Also in 2022, a photograph of Sultana featured in the Creative Connections Coventry exhibition at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum in Coventry, which celebrated cultural and political figures with connections to the city.[64] In 2023, she was nominated for a "Backbencher of the Year" award by the public relations firm Pagefield, and shortly afterwards, she received a "Coventry Legends Award" by Coventry United Women's Football Club in recognition of her work "as a committed champion of Coventry" and "for being an amazing female role model."[65][66][67]
In May 2023, she was ranked 47th on the New Statesman's "left power list", which described her as a "rare" "genuinely viral politician" with the highest number of TikTok followers of any MP, 438,000, along with 273,000 Instagram and 324,000 Twitter followers.[68] She says that social media is a "really effective in reaching out to newer audiences, younger audiences and getting out political messages".[69]