Pro-Palestinian groups to protest Harris campaign stops, Trump debate
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[August 31, 2024]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Kamala Harris' strong support for Israel as it
continues its war in Gaza is fueling calls for a fresh round of protests
at campaign stops, universities and public events in the weeks ahead,
activists told Reuters, describing what they said was her failure to
listen to pro-Palestinian voices.
Arab Americans, Muslims and their allies, shut out of a Democratic
National Convention speaking slot in Chicago, plan to show up in force
during Harris' debate against Donald Trump in Philadelphia on Sept. 10
and in major cities and college campuses on the Oct. 7 anniversary of
the Hamas attack.
On Thursday, they interrupted Harris' speech at a Savannah, Georgia
rally.
Since replacing President Joe Biden at the top of the Democratic ticket,
Harris has made it clear she will not consider cutting arms sales to
Israel, one of the main asks of pro-Palestinian groups. She reiterated
the position in a Thursday interview with CNN, saying "No, we have to
get a (ceasefire and hostage) deal done," when asked about limiting
weapons.
Harris' firmly stated position threatens to open the same cracks in the
Democratic coalition that faced Biden before he ended his campaign on
July 21, despite a huge surge in enthusiasm from Democrats when she took
over the ticket.
"That's right. War crimes and genocide will continue," Representative
Rashida Tlaib, a Democrat and the first Palestinian-American woman
elected to Congress, said about Harris' CNN interview on her personal
account on X.
Campaign officials say Harris and top campaign officials have met with
pro-Palestinian advocates, and approved space for a panel on the issue
during the DNC. Harris has hired two officials in recent weeks to reach
out to the Arab American and Muslim communities, but declined to make
them available for interviews.
Protests that roiled college campuses last spring are bubbling up in
Michigan, Pennsylvania and other battleground states. Democratic party
insiders fear Harris will lose needed votes in the Nov. 5 presidential
election, which is expected to be decided by slim margins in a handful
of states.
Harris has pulled ahead of Republican Donald Trump nationally in most
recent polls, but trails in some polls of battleground states that will
decide the 2024 winner. Until now, she has mostly avoided the same
protests over Gaza that shadowed Biden events, as likely voters hoped
she would craft a foreign policy more empathetic to Palestinians.
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A keffiyeh hangs on a U.S. flag after the conclusion of Day 4 of the
Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in
Chicago, Illinois, U.S., August 22, 2024. REUTERS/Alyssa Pointer/
File Photo
'EVERYBODY IS HURTING'
Ahmet Tekelioglu, executive director of the Council of American
Islamic Relations (CAIR)-Philadelphia, said he expected thousands of
protesters to show up on the day of the Harris-Trump debate.
Student protesters made a noisy return to Columbia University in
recent days, the epicenter of the pro-Palestinian student movement.
Elena Nissan Thomas, 19, a student at Indiana University, who drove
to Chicago to take part in a DNC protest, said she was ready to
continue protesting as the school year begins.
"I don’t understand Vice President Harris saying she supports a
ceasefire and doing nothing to do an arms embargo," she said.
Political strategists estimate nearly a million Muslims cast a
ballot in the 2020 presidential election, many of them concentrated
in battleground states, with about 70% backing President Joe Biden.
The war began on Oct. 7 when Hamas attacked Israel, killing about
1,200, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's retaliatory strikes on
Gaza, aided by U.S. support, have since killed 40,000 Palestinians,
Gaza health officials say, displacing nearly its entire 2.3 million
population and creating a famine crisis.
Tanjina Islam, a delegate to the DNC from Georgia, said she wants to
support Harris, but is devastated by the lack of concern for
Palestinians.
"Everybody is hurting. A lot of people are leaning towards the third
party - Jewish Voice for Peace, students, Black Muslims, the
Muslims, the Arabs. Everybody is hurting. And these are majority
Democrat voters," she said. "So if Harris loses Georgia, the only
reason would be that people did not go out to vote, or people voted
for the third party."
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Heather Timmons and Aurora
Ellis)
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