Though his name did not appear the ballots,[5] he ran against Omar al-Bashir for the office of Sudan President in both 2010 and 2015.[6][1] An April 2015 Bloomberg Business report stated that of President Omar al-Bashir's competitors, Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed "had the most ambitious agenda".[7]
He is a Sufi Muslim who directs the Islamic Sufi Center in Texas, established in the early 1990s.[2] He also leads a Sufi house of worship in Irving[citation needed]. In this capacity he defended the Quran in a mock jury trial against Christian fundamentalist Rev. Terry Jones,[8] but was greatly surprised and saddened by Jones choosing to burn the Quran as part of his exhibition, and the three days of violent response which resulted in Afghanistan.[9]
In late 2013 a furor arose out of an Arabic-language email circulating that promised to assist parties in acquiring land in and traveling to Sudan, and resulted from the larger-than-expected turn-out of those interested in taking part.[10]
He is married to Muna Ahmed Ibraham,[4] and is the father of Ahmed Mohamed, who was arrested and suspended from attending his high school after bringing in to school a digital clock he had assembled that a teacher believed looked like a hoax bomb, which sparked a controversy over Islamophobia, childhood experimentation and zero-tolerance policies.[11][12] Mohamed holds dual citizenship in both Sudan and the United States.[13]