George, Jeb and the Muslim Vote.......Election 2002
By Paul Findley
U.S. Muslimsa strong, new presence on Americas political
landscapeare unhappy with the Bush brothersGeorge
W., the man they helped win the presidency last November, and
Jeb, who seeks re-election next year as governor of Florida.
Those in Florida threaten to express their displeasure next year
by opposing Jebs bid. They find him inaccessible and are
upset by the continuation of profiling by Florida police. They
also see a public campaign against the governors re-election
as a way to draw brother George W.s attention to Muslims
national agenda, which includes an end to the use of secret evidence
in deportation proceedings, support of Palestinian human rights,
and the appointment of Muslims to prominent administrative positions.
During the past few weeks, I encountered repeated evidence of
a Muslim revolt against both the president and the governor. It
was common talk among those attending national conventions of
the American Muslim Council in Washington, DC, and the Islamic
Circle of North America in Cleveland, as well as an Ohio convention
of the Council on American Islamic Relations.
With Jeb Bush certain to face a strong challenge in his bid for
a second term, the Muslim vote could be just as decisive in retiring
him from Floridas highest office as it was last year in
clearing Georges path to the nations top job.
The president may not recognize it, but he is heavily indebted
to Muslim voters. On Nov. 7, they gave him a huge plurality, estimated
as high as two million votes. Exit polls showed a sudden, massive
Muslim landslide for Bush. Polls taken early in the presidential
campaign showed Vice President Al Gore the favorite. On election
day, Bush received 70 percent of the Muslim vote nationally and
90 percent in Florida.
The national tide for Bush began only two weeks before the voting,
when leaders of the four principal Muslim policy organizations
called for a bloc vote for the Republican candidate. Muslims demonstrated
remarkable discipline, departing from their normal tendency to
support Democrats. Two of the four principal Muslim leaders who
organized the bloc vote for BushSalam Al-Marayati and Dr.
Agha Saeedhave long been prominent in the California Democratic
Party.
In Florida, Bushs Muslim plurality was nearly 80,000, and
his plurality among first-time Muslim votersestimated at
27,000amounted to 50 times the 537-vote margin by which
he won the states crucial electoral votes.
Despite their decisive role on election day, Muslims feel shut
out by the president. Among their complaints:
Muslims are undeterred by these disappointments. The threat to
Jeb Bush's
reelection is only one part of their political agenda. They began
preparations for the 2002 elections last December and have become
prominent in the upcoming New Jersey gubernatorial contest.
Saeed, chairman of the American Muslim Alliance and chief architect
of the bloc vote, is upbeat. "We did not expect overnight
successes in Washington," he commented, "but we are
confident of steady progress if we continue to work together.
Muslims are in the political arena for the long haul. We are focusing
our attention on next year's elections, which will decide the
control of the next Congress, and on the 2004 presidential contest,
especially in the battleground states where partisan margins are
narrow."
Paul Findley, a member of Congress (R-IL) from 1961 to 1983,
is the author of
a new book, Silent No More: Confronting America's False Images
of Islam,
available from the AET Book Club. He resides in Jacksonville,
Illinois.