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Kamala Harris is losing support among Michigan's Muslim Americans.
The New York Times said, “Four years ago, President Biden won Michigan with the strong support of many Americans. But this weekend's Interviews suggested that support for the Democratic Party is not just eroding among Arab Americans and Muslims; in some areas, it has all but disappeared.
A year after the deadliest death for Jews since the Holocaust, relentlessly escalating violence in the Middle East threatens the Democratic coalition in the United States. While Arab American voters are showing signs of abandoning the Democratic ticket, some Jews are worried about their future in the party their families have embraced for generations.
Nowhere are these tensions more politically important than in Michigan, a key battleground state with large Arab American and Muslim voters.
Four years ago, President Biden won Michigan with strong support from many Americans. But interviews this weekend with Detroit-area voters, activists and community leaders suggested that support for the Democratic Party is not just eroding among Arab Americans and Muslims.
In some areas, it has all but disappeared.
Imam Hassan Qazwini, founder of the Islamic Society of America in Dearborn Heights, said he supports Biden in the 2020 presidential election, saying, “Personally, I don't know anyone who would vote for Harris.'' After doing so, he said he plans to vote for a third party this year. personal ability. He said many Muslims initially expected Vice President Kamala Harris to “demonstrate some level of fairness and impartiality in dealing with the conflict.” But unfortunately, that was wishful thinking. ”
One voter said most of the people she knows would only vote for “a third party or President Trump.”
Imam Hassan Qazwini, who founded the Islamic Society of America in Dearborn Heights, said he might vote for a third party this year after voting for Joe Biden in 2020, adding that Harris is a “conflict expressed disappointment at the “lack of fairness and impartiality in dealing with the United Nations'' in Israel.
Fatima Kreit, 25, of Dearborn, said most of the people she knows would vote for “a third party or Trump.”
“I would rather have nothing to do with Israel. However, I believe that Mr. Trump will cause less damage overseas,” Kreit said.
Other voters in the state expressed similar sentiments. As for why some Arab voters support Trump, at least Hussein Beydoun, 27, of Dearborn, said Trump's America First message resonates with him.
“He cares more about what's going on in America,” Beydoun said. “Democrats seem to be more concerned about what's happening in other countries than they are about their own people.”
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