Wisconsin primary tests 'uncommitted' vote on Biden's Israel stance
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[April 01, 2024]
By Nandita Bose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Opposition to President Joe Biden's strong
support of Israel's war against Hamas faces a fresh test on Tuesday in
Wisconsin where pop-up groups on a shoestring budget are urging voters
to mark themselves uncommitted in the state's Democratic primary.
For two weeks, 60 grassroots groups and organizers have advanced their
cause with phone banks, mailers, banners, knocks on doors and "friend
banks" where volunteers contact friends who then contact their friends.
Their goal is to get 20,682 voters to mark their ballots "uninstructed,"
Wisconsin's version of "uncommitted." The number is significant. Biden,
a Democrat, beat Republican Donald Trump by that number in the state in
the 2020 presidential election.
It remains unclear whether these uncommitted voters will abandon Biden
and cost him the White House.
But the Wisconsin efforts, buoyed by similar campaigns in primaries in
Hawaii, Michigan and Minnesota, could have consequences. Opinion polls
show Biden and Trump running neck-and-neck nationally ahead of their
Nov. 5 election rematch and Biden's 2020 victory was due to narrow wins
in key states.
"We're watching the precincts in Madison and Milwaukee the closest and
there is a flurry of activity in those areas," said Halah Ahmad, a
spokeswoman for the "uninstructed" campaign in Wisconsin, a state with
an open primary where voters need not register a party to vote.
Some Democrats have voiced surprise at opposition to Biden's strong
support for Israel's assault on Hamas-ruled Gaza, where health officials
say more than 32,000 Palestinians have been killed following an Oct. 7
Hamas cross-border attack in which Israel says 1,200 people were killed
and 253 taken hostage.
As famine looms in Gaza and amid pressure for a truce at home and
abroad, the U.S. abstained last week on a U.N. Security Council
resolution demanding an immediate ceasefire, sparking a spat with
Israel, its close Middle East ally.
Biden campaign spokeswoman Lauren Hitt said the president "shares the
goal for an end to the violence and a just, lasting peace in the Middle
East. He's working tirelessly to that end."
Organizers demand that Biden call for a permanent ceasefire and stop
military aid to Israel as they plan for the Democratic National
Convention in Chicago in August, where Biden is expected to be
nominated.
"The White House has changed its rhetoric on the war to where it should
have been since the start, but they are still failing to demonstrate a
meaningful policy shift when it comes to weapons and funding," said
Abbas Alawieh, a top official for the national uncommitted campaign.
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U.S. President Joe Biden speaks about rebuilding communities and
creating well-paying jobs during a visit to Milwaukee, Wisconsin,
U.S., March 13, 2024. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
More than 4,500 delegates will gather in Chicago to formally
nominate Biden. So far, uncommitted movements have won 25 delegates
in five states, but Alawieh said he sees the meeting as an
"important inflection point for the movement."
Wisconsin and Michigan are part of an imaginary "blue wall" that
Biden will need to hold to secure a second term, a drive complicated
by the popularity of third party candidates like Robert F. Kennedy
Jr.
In 2016, Trump flipped both battleground states as he defeated
Hillary Clinton and won the White House; Biden took them back from
Trump in 2020.
The president visited Wisconsin in March and said there is an "awful
lot at stake" and his campaign will "get down to knocking on doors"
in Wisconsin and several other states.
Conventional wisdom among Democrats is that inflation remains the
bigger concern for voters in U.S. Midwestern states like Michigan,
Minnesota and Wisconsin and the impact from the uncommitted movement
there will be minimal in November.
Adrian Hemond, a political analyst and chief executive of the
consulting firm Grassroots Midwest, who previously worked for
Democrats in Michigan, said the uncommitted movement needs 20 to 25%
in swing state primaries.
"So far that hasn't been the case," he said.
SHOESTRING BUDGETS, PHONE CALLS
In Michigan, "uncommitted" won about 13% of the state's Democratic
primary vote. In Minnesota, it won over 19% of the state's primary
vote after an eight-day campaign with a budget of less than $20,000.
Wisconsin campaigners are operating on a similar shoestring budget
and with little time to waste.
"We made over 200,000 calls in four days before the primary," said
Asma Nizami, an organizer with Vote Uncommitted Minnesota, who is a
part of the national uncommitted group. Wisconsin's Ahmad said the
state is using the same dialer system to reach 15,000 to 20,000
voters a day.
"It's almost unheard-of for political campaigns to be up and running
as fast," Alawieh said. "But this movement is grounded in historic
levels of anti-war organizing since October."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington; Additional reporting by
Bianca Flowers in Chicago; Editing by Heather Timmons and Howard
Goller)
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