Pro-Israel groups ignore US voters’ needs, trying to ‘buy’ Michigan elections, says daughter of Palestinian immigrants

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Updated 21 July 2022
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Pro-Israel groups ignore US voters’ needs, trying to ‘buy’ Michigan elections, says daughter of Palestinian immigrants

  • Democratic Party congressional candidate Huwaida Arraf decries AIPAC’s ‘lies’ and insults, and big-money campaigns
  • Affordable healthcare and lower taxes are critical issues for American workers, argues civil rights attorney

Civil rights attorney Huwaida Arraf told Arab News Wednesday she is determined to address the “real issues” facing voters to overcome personal and false attacks, and big-money campaigns, from pro-Israel political action committees seeking to block her from winning the Democratic Party nomination for congress in Michigan’s 10th District.

Arraf is being targeted by negative ads worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, funded by pro-Tel Aviv PACs coordinated by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. AIPAC has this year spent more than $12 million mostly attacking candidates who question or challenge Israel’s policies.

This past Tuesday in Maryland’s Democratic primary election, AIPAC-affiliated groups channeled more than $6 million to defeat former Congresswoman Donna F. Edwards in a wave of negative ads because during her past decade in congress she sought to hold Israel accountable for its actions.

Similarly, Arraf is facing a wave of negative ads funded by AIPAC-affiliated PACs focused on Michigan’s Democratic Primary on Aug. 2. But she believes most voters see past AIPAC’s “vitriol and their lies” and are responding to her message which addresses core issues that mean more to them than the politics of a foreign country.

Arraf said AIPAC is trying to “buy the election” to protect their interests in Israel, a foreign country, rather than address “the real needs” of voters who live in America.

 

 

“I am fighting to make this government and economy work for working people. We have a structure that is largely due to the influence of big money in politics. And AIPAC obviously falls into that. With their millions of dollars they try to buy politicians and that is why we see a lot of members of congress, unfortunately, blindly voting in support of Israel,” Arraf explained during an appearance on The Ray Hanania Radio Show.

“And I am talking to voters about the need to get big money out of politics so that we can make this government and economy work for them. When we are talking about why people don’t have healthcare. Why 40 percent of Americans newly diagnosed with cancer lose their entire life savings within two years because they can’t pay for the treatment that they need. Or you have an illness or an accident and you are worried about bankruptcy. Why we can’t guarantee healthcare. You are talking about big insurance companies and the influence of their money in politics. Why we are so overcharged for prescription drugs and life-saving drugs. That is the pharmaceutical companies.

“Why we are not cleaning up our air and water. You are talking about fossil fuels and the coal companies. People feel very much and are very cynical unfortunately about the elections. Who are these people representing (us) in elections? Are they representing us or are they representing those buying them or who are writing them the big checks?”

Arraf said the influence of big money is “destroying” American democracy and must be stopped.

A Christian Palestinian and mother of two young children whose immigrant father was a UAW worker in Detroit’s motor industry, Arraf is seeking to strengthen support among the large population of Christian Arabs and Chaldean Middle East Christians who constitute a large pocket of voters in the 10th District, which is considered a 50-50 Democratic and Republican district.

She said that when voters can hear her message above the attacks funded by AIPAC, voters are more sympathetic and supportive of her candidacy.

 

 

“I have been trying to motivate more people to support. And as you say, our community has been slow to come on and support for a variety of reasons, unfortunately. So, it has been a struggle getting the resources to be able to do the voter outreach,” Arraf conceded.

“But one of the things that has been very interesting is we ran a poll a couple of months ago. And that poll showed that if the election was today and voters were just going by name, this opponent that I have would win by double digits. He would beat me and everybody else. Because everybody knows his name.

“But then we read to the voter everybody’s biographies and their issues and then I move ahead slightly of this person. And then we read (to) the voters positives and negatives about everyone. For me, I included negatives like all of the horrible things that AIPAC and the like throw at me that I am antisemitic or that I am a terrorist supporter, all of these lies because they probably hear them.

“And at the end of the poll when we repolled everyone, I actually beat this guy, the considered front runner who has the name recognition. I beat him by 11 points. That shows you that my message resonates with people if they hear it, if we can reach them. And the attacks against me for my Palestine work … don’t lose me very much support because of this district.”

The 10th District is officially 78 percent White. But because Arabs are not included in the US Census there is no way to estimate the size of the Arab and Muslim community in the district.

The district, Arraf said, has a sizeable Chaldean voter population.

 

 

“But there is a very strong Arab presence here. Arabic has become now, according to a recent article that I have seen, the second most common language spoken after English in the house. And we have at least in one of the cities here almost a third of the population is Chaldean. So, Chaldean(s) and Arabs make up a sizable portion of this district. Not like Dearborn but it could get there and we are definitely expanding when we are sharing the culture, and we have a lot more Mediterranean places popping up,” Arraf said.

“But one thing that I see and I talk about a lot, is, then why are we not, why isn’t anyone talking about the power of the Arab or Middle Eastern vote? Every election cycle we hear about the power of the African American vote and the Jewish vote and the Latino vote. At least in Michigan, make them give us (Arabs and Middle Eastern people) some consideration by showing that we get out there and we vote. And that has been the struggle, part of the struggle with this race, at least, knowing that there are a lot of Arabs and Chaldeans in this district but they might not get out there and vote. And that is something that we have to work on.”

Lower taxes, better healthcare and wanting human rights are not partisan issues, Arraf argued. “My message is universal and voters who are not blindly pro-Israel can see that,” she said.

Arraf acknowledged that the Arab community is “very generous” when it comes to doing humanitarian work, but they are still far from the political level of the pro-Israel community which funds millions for their own causes.

 

 

“With regard to the Chaldean community and the Arab American community as a whole, I know that we are successful in business and in many different areas of life, but we are not represented in politics. We need more of our voices in order to be more integrated into this society, in order to have people that understand our issues and who can fight for our issues,” Arraf said.

“There is this misconception that Republicans are better for business. I am a supporter of small businesses that many Chaldeans and Arab Americans have here. A big proponent of not only incentivizing small businesses and especially when we are talking about minority communities starting small businesses. But also in leveling the playing field because we have so many mega-corporations here and monopolies that are squeezing out our small businesses and we need to fight that and I will.”

The Ray Hanania Show is broadcast live every Wednesday at 5 p.m. Eastern EST on WNZK AM 690 radio in Greater Detroit including parts of Ohio, and WDMV AM 700 radio in Washington D.C. including parts of Virginia and Maryland. The show is rebroadcast on Thursdays at 7 a.m. in Detroit on WNZK AM 690 and in Chicago at 12 noon on WNWI AM 1080.

You can listen to the radio show’s podcast by visiting ArabNews.com/rayradioshow.


Nigeria gunmen kill 50 in raid on northwest village, residents say

Updated 7 sec ago
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Nigeria gunmen kill 50 in raid on northwest village, residents say

ABUJA: At least 50 people were killed and an unspecified number kidnapped, including women and children, when gunmen attacked the village of Yargoje in northwest Nigeria at the weekend, residents said on Monday.
A year after President Bola Tinubu came to power promising to end widespread insecurity, attacks in the northwest by armed gangs, often referred to as bandits, have become almost routine, with authorities seemingly powerless to stop them.
Dozens of gunmen on motorbikes stormed Yargoje in the Kankara local government area of Katsina state late on Sunday, according to resident Hassan Ya’u.
“They shot sporadically at people, claiming the lives of more than 50 (of us), including my younger brother,” he told Reuters by phone. He added that an unknown number of villagers had been abducted and properties looted.
Another resident, Abdullahi Yunusa Kankara, said he narrowly escaped the onslaught and that it continued into the early hours of Monday. “Our town has turned into a death zone. Almost every house in the village has fallen victim to this attack.”
Kankara added: “We are currently carrying out a headcount to determine how many people have been abducted. More dead bodies were recovered this morning.”
Katsina police authorities did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Attacks in rural areas and kidnapping for ransom are rife in northern Nigeria, a region blighted by a 15-year-long Islamist insurgency in the northeast and frequent deadly clashes between farmers and herders in north-central areas.


Ukraine reconstruction official resigns citing red tape

Updated 7 min 20 sec ago
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Ukraine reconstruction official resigns citing red tape

  • Mustafa Nayyem became well-known in Ukraine in 2013, when he called for rallies against the decision by Ukraine’s then-president to stall integration talks with the EU

KYIV: A Ukrainian reconstruction official, known for galvanizing historic pro-democracy rallies in Kyiv a decade ago, announced his resignation on Monday citing red tape and a travel ban.
Mustafa Nayyem became well-known in Ukraine in 2013, when he called for rallies against the decision by Ukraine’s then-president to stall integration talks with the EU.
The protests eventually saw leader Viktor Yanukovych ousted and precipitated hostilities with Kremlin-backed separatists in the east that simmered until Russia’s invasion in February 2022.
The 42-year-old has been head of the country’s main reconstruction agency, the State Agency for Restoration and Infrastructure Development of Ukraine, since last January.
But on Monday he announced that he was stepping down from the post, because of “constant opposition, resistance and creation of artificial obstacles” to his agency’s work.
“I made the decision on my own due to systemic obstacles that do not allow me to fulfil my duties effectively,” he wrote in a post on social media.
He said his agency’s budget had been slashed, that projects had been held up by excessive paperwork, and that his colleagues’ salaries had been cut.
“All of this negatively affects the country’s defense capabilities, cargo logistics, protection of critical infrastructure, and exports of our goods,” he said.
Nayyem also directly blamed Prime Minister Denys Shmygal for blocking him from traveling to Germany this week for an upcoming conference on rebuilding efforts in Ukraine.
The decision came after the country’s infrastructure minister was dismissed last month.


Thieves ram-raid Chanel store in Paris

Updated 10 June 2024
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Thieves ram-raid Chanel store in Paris

  • The smash-and-grab took place at around 5:15 a.m. on Avenue Montaigne
  • The loss is estimated at between $6.5 million and $10.8 million

PARIS: Several thieves used a car early Monday morning to ram-raid a Chanel store near the Champs-Elysees avenue in Paris before setting it on fire and fleeing in another vehicle, a police source said.
The smash-and-grab took place at around 5:15 a.m. on Avenue Montaigne, according to the police source, who added that the extent of the damage had yet to be determined.
“The individuals used a first vehicle to enter the establishment, smashing the window, before fleeing in a second vehicle, taking some of the shop’s merchandise with them,” the source added.
The criminals set fire to the ram car before fleeing, but firefighters brought the blaze under control, the police source said.
According to a source close to the case, four people are suspected of having taken part in the attack.
The value of damage and losses was being assessed, the public prosecutor said.
In May, robbers armed with a long weapon snatched jewels from the Harry Winston shop near the Champs-Elysees before making their escape on motorbikes.
The suspects are still at large, and the loss is estimated at between $6.5 million and $10.8 million (six million and 10 million euros), according to a source close to the investigation.
In the northern French city of Lille, thieves repeatedly ram-raided luxury stores to steal handbags and other valuables last year.


Political turmoil in France won’t affect Paris Games, IOC head says

Updated 10 June 2024
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Political turmoil in France won’t affect Paris Games, IOC head says

  • Emmanuel Macron calls snap election after the far-right National trounced his own party in Sunday’s European Parliament vote
  • Two voting rounds will be held on June 30th and July 7th, the latter coming less than three weeks before the Olympics begin

PARIS: Political upheaval in France won’t affect preparations for the Olympic Summer Games, IOC President Thomas Bach said on Monday after President Emmanuel Macron shocked France with his call for new parliamentary elections.
Macron called the snap election after the far-right National trounced his own party in Sunday’s European Parliament vote. Two voting rounds will be held on June 30th and July 7th, the latter coming less than three weeks before the Olympics begin.
“France is used to holding elections, they will do it one more time, there will be a new government and everyone will support the Olympics ,” Bach said during a Paris 2024 run-up event in Paris, adding that French political leaders were united in their support of the Games.
“I have no indication whatsoever that this unity will break now only a couple of days before the Games open,” he said.
Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo, a socialist, said she was “having a hard time understanding” why Macron chose to throw the country into political uncertainty so close to the Games, calling the move “one more coup” by the president.
Paris 2024 chief Tony Estanguet said his team was “more determined than ever” to make the Games a success. “There were around ten elections since we launched the candidacy for the Olympics and we understood how to work with the public actors.”


Flooding and landslides kill three in Vietnam’s north

Updated 10 June 2024
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Flooding and landslides kill three in Vietnam’s north

  • Residents in Ha Giang city stood on rooftops waiting for rescue
  • High water on the Lo river had triggered ‘floods and landslides’

HANOI: Flooding and landslides in northern Vietnam have killed three people, state media said Monday, after days of heavy rain that partially submerged thousands of homes.
Images on state media showed water gushing down the steep roads of mountainous Ha Giang province, a popular spot for motorcycle tours, with vehicles overturned and abandoned in the floodwater.
Residents in Ha Giang city stood on rooftops waiting for rescue.
It has been raining heavily and continuously in the province since Saturday. Thousands of homes have been partially submerged and many roads damaged, state media said.
High water on the Lo river had triggered “floods and landslides,” according to a statement on the website of the provincial authorities.
Access to three communes bordering China had been cut off due to landslides, the statement said.
According to state-run Voice of Vietnam, three people died after being swept away in floodwater or buried in landslides.
At the weekend, serious flooding was also reported in the northern port city of Hai Phong and Quang Ninh province where UNESCO World Heritage site Ha Long Bay is located.
Vietnam is frequently lashed by harsh weather in the rainy season between June and November.
Last year, natural disasters including floods and landslides left 169 people dead or missing in the Southeast Asian nation.
Scientists have warned that extreme weather events globally are becoming more intense and frequent due to climate change.