Biden faces protest vote over Gaza in Michigan; polls show Trump beating
Haley
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[February 27, 2024]
By Nandita Bose and Tim Reid
DETROIT (Reuters) - President Joe Biden's support for Israel's war
against Hamas in Gaza will be put to a test on Tuesday in Michigan, home
to a large Arab American constituency where Democratic voters have been
urged to mark their primary ballots as "uncommitted."
Biden, a Democrat, and Republican former President Donald Trump will
both want strong showings in their separate nominating contests.
Michigan is a battleground state expected to play a decisive role in the
head-to-head Nov. 5 election.
Many in the large Arab American community are outraged, along with some
progressive Democrats, over what they assert is Biden's unwavering
support for Israel's Gaza offensive in which tens of thousands of
Palestinians have been killed.
Late on Monday, Biden said Israel had agreed to halt military activities
in Gaza for the Muslim holy month of Ramadan expected to begin on the
evening of March 10, as Hamas studied a draft for a truce that includes
a prisoner-hostage exchange.
The effect on the vote in Michigan remained to be seen.
In the run-up to the primary vote, Rashida Tlaib, a Michigan Democratic
congresswoman and Palestinian American, had urged Democratic primary
voters to not vote for Biden on Tuesday and to instead mark
"uncommitted" on their ballots.
The uncommitted campaign, backed by Arab American leaders, won support,
including in Dearborn, a city where nearly 55% of its 110,000 residents
are of Middle Eastern or North African ancestry, most of them Arab, says
the U.S. Census Bureau.
On Sunday, Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, pushed back
against the uncommitted campaign. She warned that if Democrats failed to
support Biden, it could hand the swing state and the country to Trump in
November.
"It's important not to lose sight of the fact that any vote that's not
cast for Joe Biden supports a second Trump term,” Whitmer told CNN's
"State of the Union."
She reminded people of Trump's travel ban on people from Muslim
countries when he was president. "A second Trump term would be
devastating," Whitmer said.
Waleed Shahid, a senior Democratic strategist and adviser to the Listen
to Michigan group behind the uncommitted vote, said: "When voters choose
uncommitted over President Biden in this primary, what they're saying is
we are uncommitted to President Biden's reelection until he stops
funding Israel's war in Gaza."
A senior Biden campaign official said: "We're taking this seriously. The
president himself has said repeatedly that he hears these demonstrators
and that he thinks that their cause is important."
The official added: "This is not a cause for panic. Michigan is big and
has many different constituencies and overall, we have a good story to
tell there."
On Feb. 1, Biden won a strong pledge of support from union autoworkers,
a Michigan voting bloc no less crucial to his reelection bid. The state
is home to nearly 20% of all U.S. auto production, more than any state
in the country.
"We are going to keep highlighting the contrast between Biden and Trump
and once that becomes clear, we fully expect these voters, who have
walked away from Biden, to come back," said LaShawn English, UAW
Director Region 1, which represents eight counties in Michigan.
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U.S. President Joe Biden meets with autoworkers after the United
Auto Workers (UAW) union recently endorsed his reelection bid, at
the UAW Region 1 George Merrelli Technical Training Center in
Warren, in the Detroit metro area, Michigan, U.S., February 1, 2024.
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
MICHIGAN A BATTLEGROUND FOR SUPPORT
Biden beat Trump in Michigan by 2.8 percentage points in the 2020
election. Trump beat Democrat Hillary Clinton there by less than one
percentage point when he won the presidency in 2016. Those results
explain why both candidates want to shore up support now.
"Those who are pushing for the uncommitted vote for Tuesday should
be careful what they wish for because Biden is trailing Trump in our
statewide polls in Michigan. Biden is underperforming right now, and
this uncommitted movement could hurt him in November," said Bernie
Porn, president of Michigan-based research firm EPIC-MRA.
Hamas fighters infiltrated Israel on Oct. 7, killing about 1,200
people on the deadliest day for Israel in its 75-year-old history
and taking some 240 hostages back to Hamas-ruled Gaza, according to
Israeli tallies.
In the four months since, Palestinian authorities say Israel has
killed nearly 30,000 people in Gaza and displaced most of its 2.3
million people. Israeli leaders say they remain committed to wiping
out Hamas.
Biden has been supportive of Israel while pushing for more
humanitarian aid to Gaza and has faced criticism from some Democrats
for not backing a ceasefire in the Palestinian territory,
On the Republican side, Michigan this year will allocate its
delegates to July's party convention based on both Tuesday's
primary, open to all voters, and a March 2 caucus in which active
party members choose the nominee.
Beset by chaos among warring factions, the Michigan Republican Party
will hold competing caucus meetings on March 2. Nonetheless, Trump
is expected to easily win the Tuesday primary and the March 2
caucuses. Opinion polls show him holding an average statewide lead
of nearly 57 percentage points over rival Nikki Haley, says the poll
tracking website FiveThirtyEight.
The results in Michigan will be watched to see how much Trump
struggles to attract large numbers of moderates and traditional
Republicans, voters he will likely need to win back the White House
in November.
Trump has soundly defeated Haley in all the nominating contests so
far, but Haley has performed well with moderate voters, exposing a
potential vulnerability for Trump in the general election.
After losing to Trump in Saturday's primary in South Carolina, her
home state, Haley vowed to carry on despite having no clear path to
the nomination. She campaigned in Michigan on Monday and will visit
many of the 15 states that vote on March 5, known as "Super
Tuesday."
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Detroit and Tim Reid in Washington;
Editing by Howard Goller)
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