#AbandonBiden campaign seeks to leverage Arab- and Muslim-American political influence

#AbandonBiden campaign seeks to leverage Arab- and Muslim-American political influence
The Joe Biden administration refused to call for a ceasefire in Gaza and provided Israel not only billions in financial support but also military armament. (AFP)
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Updated 20 December 2023
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#AbandonBiden campaign seeks to leverage Arab- and Muslim-American political influence

#AbandonBiden campaign seeks to leverage Arab- and Muslim-American political influence
  • Biden’s support of Gaza carnage is ‘turning point,’ says Minnesota University Prof. Hassan Abdel Salam
  • America’s over 7m Muslims, 4m Arabs can ‘significantly impact’ 2024 presidential election

A leader of the “#AbandonBiden” campaign is urging Arab and Muslim Americans to vote “against’ President Joe Biden in the upcoming election, saying the goal is to empower the community as a voting bloc but also to show the Democrats that they “can’t be taken for granted.”

University of Minnesota’s Prof. Hassan Abdel Salam, one of the leaders of the new movement — launched in response to Biden’s embrace of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s indiscriminate carnage against Palestinians in the Gaza Strip —  said the campaign represents a “turning point” in Arab- and Muslim-American political history.

Salam told Arab News the goal is to show the Democratic Party, “which has taken Arab- and Muslim-American voters for granted,” that the community’s call for an end to Israel’s war on Gaza must be taken more seriously.

“We think that after 60 days of this rampant attack by the state of Israel, that we really have no other choice. We will not vote for Biden if he is on the ticket. And even if there is a ceasefire that is called, we can never, never reward this kind of behavior,” Salam said, noting the movement is not endorsing former President Donald Trump or any other candidate.

“Not only will this create an opportunity now to have a clear message to the White House, but it will also demonstrate the power of the Arab- and Muslim-American vote, so that in the long-term we don’t do all this triage after these attacks, we will be taken seriously ... We are saying please stop the killings, which is supposed to be a fundamental principle of the Democratic Party.”

Salam said that if Arab and Muslim Americans present a “credible political threat” to Biden, then in the future and on the issue of the occupation, “we will be heard and policy will move towards or (in the) direction of dignity and the value of life.”

The #AbandonBiden movement is targeting critical “swing states” in which Biden barely defeated Trump. The Arab and Muslim community has sizable voting populations in those states, including Michigan, Minnesota, Arizona, Wisconsin, Georgia, Nevada and Pennsylvania.

For example, Biden defeated Trump in Michigan by only 154,188 votes in 2020, Minnesota by 233,012, Arizona by 10,457, Wisconsin by 20,682, Georgia by 11,779, Nevada by 33,596, and Pennsylvania by 81,660.

The #AbandonBiden movement is also targeting states in which Biden had significant support including in Illinois. And Florida where Trump had strong support over Biden, defeating him by 371,686 votes.

Salam said if America’s more than 7 million Muslims and 4 million Arabs stand together, they can “significantly impact” the 2024 presidential election.

He explained the goal is not to take a “short-term approach” to American politics. He said the group is not endorsing Trump or other candidates. The issue is Arab and Muslim Americans “must not be taken for granted” by the Biden administration or any president.

“It’s unimaginable for us to go back to Biden. When we were doing these press conferences calling on Arabs and Muslims to abandon Biden, we were told through folks who communicated the position of the White House that they thought we were just throwing a tantrum and that we would eventually go back into his (Biden’s) arms in November,” Salam said.

“This isn’t a tantrum. This is not about politics. This is about valuing life ... We are always told to select the lesser of two evils. Mr. Trump did not allow our family members to come into the country. But Mr. Biden allowed our friends and family to be killed.”

Salam said the Biden administration has failed to rescue Arab and Muslim Americans caught in Israel’s war on Gaza while asserting that rescuing Americans was a priority.

“We have to think about this as a means to increase the power position of Arab and Muslim Americans. If we say we have to vote for Biden what does that say about us and what we believe is right? That it’s not important?” Salam said they will not be discouraged by empty promises from Biden’s allies.

“We had folks that the White House sent to us, very high officials, begging us to end the conference (in Michigan) and close it down. They recognize the political threat for what it is.”

Organizers of the #AbandonBiden campaign hope to bring the Arab- and Muslim-American community together and demonstrate to Democrats and other political parties their power in a nation that has the most influence over Israel.

“We are not supporting Trump in this process,” Salam emphasized, noting presidential elections are held every four years in America and candidates come and go.

“It’s not just a message to the Democratic Party or to Biden. It is about Arabs and Muslims coming home to America. Neither party will ever dismiss us as they have been doing. Muslim Americans and Arab Americans might actually be the most influential people on the planet when it comes to the Middle East and affecting change in US foreign policy towards Israel. Biden created the environment which allowed Israel to do these acts with no consequence.”

The #AbandonBiden campaign launched in Michigan during the first few weeks of the Israeli assault on Gaza following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack. This was when the Biden administration refused to call for a ceasefire and provided not only billions in financial support but also military armaments which were used to kill Arabs and Muslims in Gaza.

“This is historically unprecedented the way in which we are approaching this. It is a historical moment in which we have to act now for this to be a juncture which shifts our accepting the way the political system works,” Salam said.

“We are from swing states and we are going to come together and we are going to make this White House understand finally that Muslim Americans, Arab Americans are American. We have the power and the ability to determine who will be president.”

Salam said the movement is not “anti-Israel” nor “anti-Jewish” but is instead focused on preventing the indiscriminate killing of any innocent civilians, Muslims, Christians or Jews.

The #AbandonBiden rallies are being organized in the cities of key states and will continue through next year targeting the Democratic Primary elections and culminating in the Nov. 5, 2024 presidential election. The words #AbandonBiden have been prominently displayed at several large demonstrations across the country over the past two months.


Sullivan expresses worry over escalating Israel-Lebanon tension, calls Hezbollah strike as justice served

Sullivan expresses worry over escalating Israel-Lebanon tension, calls Hezbollah strike as justice served
Updated 11 sec ago
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Sullivan expresses worry over escalating Israel-Lebanon tension, calls Hezbollah strike as justice served

Sullivan expresses worry over escalating Israel-Lebanon tension, calls Hezbollah strike as justice served
  • Sullivan said the risk of further escalation is “acute,” following the Israeli strike as well as the detonation of pagers and walkie-talkies across Lebanon this month that killed at least 39 and injured roughly 3,000

WILMINGTON, Delaware: US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan on Saturday said he was worried about escalation between Israel and Lebanon but that the Israeli killing of a top Hezbollah leader brought justice to the Iran-backed group.
Sullivan, speaking with reporters in Wilmington, Delaware, said he still sees a path to a ceasefire in Gaza but that the US is “not at a point right now where we’re prepared to put something on the table.”
Sullivan said the US is continuing to work with Qatar and Egypt as the two countries talk with Hamas, but that Washington, as it talks with Israel, is not in a position to propose a deal that could be accepted by both parties.
“Could that change over the course of the coming days? It could,” Sullivan said.
Hezbollah overnight said 16 of its members including senior leader Ibrahim Aqil and another top commander, Ahmed Wahbi, were among the 37 people that Lebanon’s health ministry said were killed in an Israeli airstrike in a Beirut suburb on Friday.
The Israeli airstrike, which the Lebanese health ministry said killed three children and seven women, was the deadliest in its conflict with Hezbollah since Oct. 8, when the group began firing rockets into Israel in sympathy with Palestinians in the nearly year-old Israeli war against Hamas in Gaza.
Sullivan said the Friday strike served justice to Aqil, who was wanted by the US for two 1983 Beirut truck bombings that killed more than 300 people at the American embassy and a US Marines barracks.
“Any time a terrorist who has murdered Americans is brought to justice, we believe that that is a good outcome.”
Sullivan said the risk of further escalation is “acute,” following the Israeli strike as well as the detonation of pagers and walkie-talkies across Lebanon this month that killed at least 39 and injured roughly 3,000. Those attacks were widely believed to have been carried out by Israel, which has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement.
“While the risk of escalation is real, we actually believe there is also a distinct avenue to getting to a cessation of hostilities and a durable solution that makes people on both sides of the border feel secure,” Sullivan said.
An Israeli airstrike on a school sheltering displaced people in southern Gaza City on Saturday
killed at least 22 people
including 13 children and six women, Gaza’s health ministry said. Israel said it was targeting a Hamas command center it said was embedded in the school. 

 


Israel’s military offensive drives Arab and Muslim vote in US presidential race, Arab-American convention confirms

Israel’s military offensive drives Arab and Muslim vote in US presidential race, Arab-American convention confirms
Updated 21 September 2024
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Israel’s military offensive drives Arab and Muslim vote in US presidential race, Arab-American convention confirms

Israel’s military offensive drives Arab and Muslim vote in US presidential race, Arab-American convention confirms
  • Speakers were pressed by attendees on whether they would denounce Israel’s violence

DEARBORN, IL: Community anger over US support for Israel’s bombardment in the Gaza Strip spilled open among Arab and Muslim voters and activists during a convention organized by the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee in Dearborn, Michigan last week.

The ADC’s Annual National Convention, which ran from Sept. 12-15, was hosted outside Washington for the first time — an intentional choice aimed at answering the Wall Street Journal’s accusations that Dearborn was the city of terrorists in the US, ADC Chairman Safa Rifka told Arab News.

Dearborn is a “city of fantastic citizens, proud American citizens” and “we wanted to make a statement that it is the capital of Arab America,” he said.

The majority of the nearly 1,000 attendees demanded that Democratic officeholders support the third-party candidacy of Dr. Jill Stein, who many believe is the only presidential contender to strongly criticize the actions of Israel’s government and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

More than 50,000 Gazans have been killed during the near yearlong war, but independent sources banned by Israel’s government from entering Gaza contend the number is in excess of 150,000.

Speaker after speaker were pressed by audience members on whether they would stand up and denounce Israel’s violence.

“The Gaza war dominates our concerns,” Rifka said “Clearly the community is concerned about how the elected officials in this country will respond to the carnage.”

Several attendees, activists and elected officials told The Ray Hanania Radio Show that the US government needed to do more than simply criticize Hamas for its assault on Oct. 7, which provoked Israel’s invasion of Gaza.

A few attendees expressed support for Republican candidate Donald Trump and others said they were hoping for Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris to not only condemn Hamas’ violence but also expand it to condemn the military campaign by Netanyahu’s government.

Michigan State Rep. Alabas Farhat said that when he and his colleagues called for a ceasefire, “dozens of representatives and elected officials” signed the letter.

“I think the Arab community right now has said very loudly, very clearly, they want a nominee for a ceasefire,” he said.

Many attendees believe it is still not too late for candidates to take action. With roughly six weeks until the election, Illinois State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid said that not only was the door open but there was a need for candidates to “change policy, protect lives and to earn the support of so many people who care deeply about this issue.”

“People need to vote in November and people need to engage with their elected officials to let them know where they stand,” he said.

Amid growing frustrating and political uncertainty, Georgia State Rep. Ruwa Romman said it was important not to give up.

Her biggest concern, she said, was the growing idea of “nihilism” and “cynicism” and “the idea that nothing matters, nothing will change, so there’s no point in trying.”

“That is making us surrender before we’ve even tried. My goal is to make sure nobody gives up,” she said.

The Ray Hanania Radio Show is broadcast on the US Arab Radio Network on Thursday at 5 p.m. EST and again on Mondays in Michigan on WNZK AM 690 radio. It is also broadcast on Facebook.com/ArabNews and on Youtube, and podcast at ArabNews.com/rayradioshow. For more information on the host, visit www.Hanania.com.


Trump says ‘too late’ for another debate against Harris

Trump says ‘too late’ for another debate against Harris
Updated 21 September 2024
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Trump says ‘too late’ for another debate against Harris

Trump says ‘too late’ for another debate against Harris

WILMINGTON, US: US presidential candidate Donald Trump on Saturday rejected a proposal from Democratic opponent Kamala Harris to face off in another debate, saying it was “too late” to do so.
“The problem with another debate is that it’s just too late, voting has already started,” the Republican said at a rally in North Carolina, with early voting already underway in three states.


Somalia accuses Ethiopia of shipping arms to unstable region

A member of the Somali security forces patrols along the coast of Qaw, in Puntland, northeastern Somalia. (AFP file photo)
A member of the Somali security forces patrols along the coast of Qaw, in Puntland, northeastern Somalia. (AFP file photo)
Updated 21 September 2024
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Somalia accuses Ethiopia of shipping arms to unstable region

A member of the Somali security forces patrols along the coast of Qaw, in Puntland, northeastern Somalia. (AFP file photo)
  • Foreign Ministry says documented evidence confirms the arrival of two lorries transporting weapons in Puntland region
  • We demand an immediate halt and call on international partners to support peace efforts in the Horn of Africa

NAIROBI: Somalia has accused neighboring Ethiopia of supplying weapons to its northeastern Puntland region, which this year unilaterally declared it would act as an independent state despite protests from the central government.

There is a history of stormy relations between Ethiopia and Somalia — a fragile jigsaw of federal states whose instability weakens the central government’s ability to counter a long-running insurgency by militant group Al-Shabab.
Tensions between the Horn of Africa countries increased on Jan. 1, when Addis Ababa signed a deal with another northern region of Somalia — the breakaway territory of Somaliland — giving landlocked Ethiopia long-sought-after ocean access.
“Somalia strongly condemns unauthorized arms shipments from Ethiopia to Somalia’s Puntland region, violating our sovereignty and threatening regional security,” the Foreign Ministry in Mogadishu said.
“We demand an immediate halt and call on international partners to support peace efforts in the Horn of Africa.”
Somaliland is located between the Ethiopian border and Puntland.
The latter, a semi-autonomous part of Somalia since 1998, said it would operate as an independent state in January due to a row with the central government over constitutional changes.
In its post on X, the Somali Foreign Ministry said: “Documented evidence confirms the arrival of two lorries transporting weapons from Ethiopia to the Puntland region of Somalia, executed without any diplomatic engagement or clearance.”
“This activity constitutes a grave infringement on Somalia’s sovereignty and poses serious implications for national and regional security.”
It did not say when the shipment occurred or to whom the weapons were sent.
Ethiopia’s Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Under the January deal, Somaliland, which unilaterally broke away from Somalia in 1991, agreed to lease 20 km of its coast for 50 years to Ethiopia, which wants to set up a naval base and a commercial port.
In return, Somaliland — whose independence is not endorsed by Mogadishu — has said Ethiopia would become the first country in the world to give it formal recognition, although Addis Ababa has not confirmed these assertions.
Senior officials in Mogadishu have said this agreement means thousands of Ethiopian soldiers stationed in Somalia to fight Al-Shabab will now have to leave.
The troops are deployed on Somali territory under a bilateral accord and an agreement with the African Union.
On Aug.14, Mogadishu signed a military pact with Ethiopia’s rival Egypt, which has offered to join the AU force in Somalia in 2025.
Turkiye has been mediating between Somalia and Ethiopia since July in discussions to resolve their differences.
Two rounds of talks in Ankara failed to produce tangible progress, and a third round, scheduled for last week, was canceled without any comment from either the host or the protagonists.

 


Church of England bishops accuse Israel of ‘acting above the law’ in West Bank

Palestinians raise their hands as they walk past Israeli forces during an Israeli raid in Qabatiya near Jenin.
Palestinians raise their hands as they walk past Israeli forces during an Israeli raid in Qabatiya near Jenin.
Updated 21 September 2024
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Church of England bishops accuse Israel of ‘acting above the law’ in West Bank

Palestinians raise their hands as they walk past Israeli forces during an Israeli raid in Qabatiya near Jenin.
  • In a letter, the bishops said there is now “little distinction between settler violence and state violence”
  • They demanded that the Israeli government “stop acting as if it is uniquely above the law”

LONDON: Israel is acting as if it is above the law, four of the most senior Church of England bishops said in a letter about state and settler violence in the occupied West Bank.

The bishops added that there is now “little distinction between settler violence and state violence,” The Guardian reported on Saturday.

“There has been a drastic acceleration and intensification of settlement construction, land confiscation and home demolition in the West Bank, exacerbating longstanding patterns of oppression, violence and discrimination against Palestinians,” they said in the letter.

“There has always been a close relationship between successive Israeli governments and the settler movement, but there now seems to be little distinction between settler violence and state violence.”

The bishops demanded that the Israeli government “stop acting as if it is uniquely above the law.”

They said the UN General Assembly’s call last week for Israel to end its unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territories “can’t be another false dawn.”

The UN must “move beyond strong words and agree a robust set of measures to ensure Israel’s compliance” with international law, they added.

The UNGA strongly supported a non-binding Palestinian resolution on Wednesday demanding that Israel end its “unlawful presence” in Gaza and the occupied West Bank within a year.

While the resolution is not legally binding, the extent of its support reflects world opinion.

The resolution also demands the withdrawal of all Israeli forces and the evacuation of settlers from the Occupied Palestinian Territories “without delay.”

It urges countries to impose sanctions on those responsible for maintaining Israel’s presence in the territories and halt arms exports if weapons are suspected of being used there.

The letter’s signatories were Rachel Treweek, the bishop of Gloucester; Guli Francis-Dehqani, bishop of Chelmsford; Graham Usher, bishop of Norwich; and Christopher Chessun, bishop of Southwark.