Li serves as a political contributor for NBC News and MSNBC. Li hosted a weekly TV series, Listening with Lindy Li, in 2018 which aired on cable television in the Philadelphia area.
Early life and education
Lindy Li was born in Chengdu, Sichuan, China, moved to Sheffield, England, at age three, and immigrated with her family to the United States when she was five.[3] Her grandparents were illiterate farmers.[4] Li spent much of her childhood in Malvern, Pennsylvania.[5] Li attended public school until she transferred to the Agnes Irwin School, a private college-preparatory day school for girls, under a scholarship,[4] graduating in 2008.[6] In high school, she was involved in crew and ran cross-country and track. She describes her upbringing as strict, telling the Washington Post, “I was forced to play piano hours a day; I was forced to study.” “I did everything I could, because I was terrified about getting into college.”[4]
Her father is a real estate executive and property owner; her mother is involved in the church. Li has a younger brother named Jeffrey.[4] In high school, Li interned for Pennsylvania congressman and 2020 presidential candidate, Joe Sestak.
Li attended Princeton University and was elected class president at age 17. She became the first woman at Princeton to hold the position of class president for all four years. There, she started the "Do It In the Dark" campaign, which encouraged students across campus to reduce their carbon footprint.[4] She wrote her senior thesis on the ethics of climate change legislation and graduated in 2012 with a philosophy degree.[7] At Commencement, Li addressed Princeton's graduating Class of 2012 as their four-time Class President.[8]
Career
Before entering politics, Li worked as a financial analyst for Merck and Morgan Stanley.[9][10] Of this decision, she told the Washington Post in 2015, “At Princeton, all of us go into Wall Street,” she explains. “We have so much to offer society, but we’re enticed by these ephemeral and meaningless ups. It’s sad that so many of us have lost touch with the ideals we brought into college.”[4]
In 2016, at 25, Li became a candidate for Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district becoming the youngest female congressional candidate in U.S. history.[9][11] Three months before the Democratic primary, she transferred her candidacy to the 6th congressional district, citing advice from party leaders.[9] Li withdrew her candidacy in April 2016, after a court challenge that Li did not have enough signatures from registered Democrats in her own district.[12]
Li serves as a political contributor for NBC News and MSNBC.[18] Li also hosted a weekly TV series, Listening with Lindy Li, which aired on cable television in the Philadelphia area. On her show she interviewed various figures including members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, the former CEO of Comcast, David L. Cohen, and others. Li was featured in a 2020 Fox News documentary titled My Socialism Nightmare.[19]
Li previously served as the Treasurer for the Pennsylvania Young Democrats from 2017 to 2020. She resigned the post after conflict with group leaders over her Twitter posts critical of Bernie Sanders and his supporters. Li had tweeted a 2-min. video of Sanders from 1988 praising the Moscow metro: “#BernieSanders lavishes praise on Communist Russia, preferring the Soviet Union to the American way of life.”[14] Li alleged her resignation was a real-life example of bullying by Bernie Bros; the club president denied this, saying that her resignation was voluntary.[20][21]Vanity Fair also reported the resignation as voluntary.[14]
Alongside Aftab Pureval, the Mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio, Li co-chairs the Justice Unites Us Super PAC, a multimillion dollar political action committee that focuses specifically on increasing Asian-American turnout across the country, particularly in battleground states.[24] In 2022, she was named by City & State Pennsylvania as one of the rising stars of Philadelphia.[25] In 2022, 2023, and 2024 she was named by City & State Pennsylvania as one of the 100 most powerful women in the state and was one of the youngest to make the list each year.[26][27]
In August 2023, Li was appointed by Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro as a Commissioner of Pennsylvania, serving on the Governor's Advisory Commission on Asian American and Pacific Islander Affairs.[28] She also serves on the DNC's National Finance Committee.[29]
In 2024, WIRED magazine named Li one of the top influencers shaping the presidential election.[30] Li was credentialed by the 2024 Democratic National Convention as one of its official content creators.[31] This marked the first time in history that top influencers were given exclusive access to the convention.[32]
In 2024, after the US presidential election, Li transitioned from being a supporter of to being a critic of the Democratic Party. Li described the Kamala Harris campaign as a "$1 billion disaster," stating that Democrat donors were misled by the campaign to believe "that this is an eminently winnable race".[33] In an interview on America's Newsroom, Li intensified her criticism, saying "I lost tens of thousands of followers because I dared to tell the truth. Because in a cult, you can't tell the truth. You can't ask any questions, but I'm done with that," and ridiculed the notion of Harris running for Governor of California in 2026.[34][a] In an interview on Fox News, Li indicated she would no longer be supporting the Democratic Party stating that "leaving the Democratic Party or even questioning the Democratic Party is like leaving a cult. It’s terrifying. I don’t want to be a part of this craziness anymore.” Li also expressed support for Pete Hegseth, Trump's nominee for Secretary of Defense. [35][36][37] Li further said she "has been a conservative all my life."[2]
^"This was a resounding defeat and, right now, Kamala Harris is indulging in delusions of running for governor of California, possibly in 2026 or even president again in 2028. America has said, 'We don't want to be coconut-pilled. We do not want Kamala Harris. We don't want failed border policies,' "
^ abcdefLoftus, Lauren (August 14, 2015). "The congressional kid: How a millennial plans to make it to the Capitol". Washington Post. Retrieved March 14, 2020. She started a campus-wide initiative to curb excessive energy use called Do It in the Dark. She thought about going to law school as a means to an eventual end in politics, but landed a high-paying job in finance instead.
^Tamari, Jonathan (January 6, 2016). "Congressional candidate makes district switch". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on March 10, 2016. Retrieved March 14, 2020. Democrat Lindy Li now plans to run in the Chester County-based Sixth District, after beginning her campaign last summer for the seat in the Delaware County-based Seventh.
^"News Post". The Agnes Irwin School. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
^"An Exclusive Interview with Lindy Li, The Youngest Female Congressional Candidate in U.S. History". Cornell Business Review. December 22, 2019. Retrieved March 8, 2020. In high school, I interned for my Congressman, and right now I'm a political contributor for MSNBC and NBC News. MSNBC is a TV channel, and NBC News publishes news articles online and is also one of the nation's foremost broadcasting networks. I also help lead Asian-American political and fundraising efforts for the Biden campaign.
^Otterbein, Holly (May 4, 2018). "A Q&A with Lindy Li, an ex-wealth manager running for Congress PA#5". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved March 14, 2020. Li, 27, supports Medicare-for-All, debt-free college and a ban on assault weapons. She was one of 10 Democrats in the primary for Pennsylvania's Fifth District, which is largely based in Delaware County but also includes part of Philadelphia and Montgomery County.
^"The New Pennsylvania Congressional Map, District by District". The New York Times. February 19, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2020. The old moose-and-antlers-like Seventh District might have been the most gerrymandered district in the nation...The new Fifth...includes all of Delaware County. It represents a natural political community: the Philadelphia suburbs.