OPINION
MICHELLE
GOLDBERG
Biden Is in Danger of Losing Michigan and, With
It, the Whole Election
Feb. 23,
2024
Michelle
Goldberg
By Michelle
Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist, reporting from Dearborn, Mich.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/23/opinion/gaza-biden-michigan.html
As
infuriated as she is by President Biden’s stalwart support for Israel, Layla
Elabed has not ruled out voting for him in November. A progressive Palestinian
American community organizer in Dearborn, Mich., a majority Arab American city
near Detroit, she doesn’t want to see Donald Trump back in office.
“Donald
Trump has never been a friend to our community,” she told me as we sat in an
airy, modern Yemeni coffee shop. But to win her back, she said, “the very bare
minimum” Biden needs to do is to completely overhaul America’s relationship
with Israel, demand a permanent end to hostilities and end American military
aid to Israel, at least as long as its war in Gaza drags on.
Given how
strong support for Israel is in the Democratic and Republican Parties, I’m
fairly confident that an aid cutoff is not going to happen anytime soon. But
speaking to Elabed, the younger sister of Rashida Tlaib, a Democratic
congresswoman, I sensed a chasm between my resigned assumptions about how
American politics works and her convictions about what’s necessary to stave off
even more mass death in Gaza.
“We’re
looking at unprecedented times where we are watching a genocide unfold in front
of our eyes,” said Elabed. Biden’s backing of Israel may be predictable, given
both his own avowed Zionism and the political influence of Israel’s American
champions, but to her and others like her, it’s become intolerable. That’s why
Elabed is managing the Listen to Michigan campaign, which is organizing to get
people to protest Biden’s handling of the war by voting “uncommitted” in
Tuesday’s Democratic primary.
Biden will
most likely never satisfy those most horrified by his Middle East policies, but
if he doesn’t do more to try, he’s in danger of losing Michigan in November,
which would almost certainly cost him the election. The state has the country’s
largest percentage of Arab American voters, and within that community — as well
as among many non-Arab Muslims, young people and progressives — there’s a deep
sense of betrayal and fury at Biden for standing behind Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu as Israel pulverizes Gaza.
These
voters have heard Biden criticize Israel’s “indiscriminate” and “over the top”
bombardment of Palestinian civilians and infrastructure, but they don’t see his
administration taking meaningful steps to restrain it. Given the intensity of
pro-Israel sentiment in some corners of the Democratic Party, breaking with
Israel has long been seen as politically risky. The “uncommitted” margin in
Michigan next week will be an imperfect but useful gauge of the degree to which
cleaving to Israel has become risky as well.
Elabed said
Listen to Michigan, which officially began just weeks ago, is aiming to garner
10,000 to 15,000 votes, enough to “send the message to Joe Biden and his
administration and the Democratic Party, that we are a political force.”
(Trump’s Michigan margin in 2016 was about 10,000 votes, though Biden beat
Trump by much more than that in 2020.)
The
campaign has spent six figures on mailers and digital advertising, and
activists are holding phone banks and canvassing. High-profile Arab American
leaders, including Tlaib; Abdullah Hammoud, the mayor of Dearborn; and Abraham
Aiyash, the Democratic majority leader of Michigan’s House of Representatives,
are all on board, as is Our Revolution, the group founded by Bernie Sanders in
2016, though Sanders has disavowed the “uncommitted” campaign.
Biden’s
team seems to understand that they’re in trouble in Michigan. Early this month,
they dispatched aides to Dearborn to meet with Arab American leaders, including
one from Listen to Michigan. The next week, Biden issued an order protecting
thousands of Palestinians in the United States from deportation for the next 18
months. In an important step against Israeli extremism, he imposed sanctions on
violent settlers in the West Bank.
But as long
as his efforts don’t directly address the catastrophic suffering in Gaza,
they’re not going to mollify activists. And while it appears obvious that Trump
would be worse on the issues pro-Palestinian activists care about, their
desperation to exert leverage on Biden seems, at least for the moment, to
override fear of Trump’s return.
It is
therefore a political as well as a moral imperative for Biden to do more than
simply decry Palestinian civilian casualties, particularly as Israel threatens
to invade the southern Gaza city of Rafah, where more than a million displaced
people are sheltering in hideous conditions. Prominent epidemiologists have
estimated that if the war escalates, an additional 85,000 Gazans could die over
the next six months.
The urgent
need to prevent as many of these deaths as possible transcends American
politics, and it should be reason enough for the administration to stop
shielding Israel at the United Nations, where this week it vetoed another
cease-fire resolution. But given the stakes of the 2024 election, the political
implications of the ongoing war can’t be ignored. “I don’t see Biden winning
Michigan unless he changes course on Gaza,” Andy Levin, a former Michigan
Democratic congressman, told me.
Of all the
people who’ve joined the movement to vote “uncommitted” on Tuesday, Levin
surprised me the most, because just last month, he shot down calls from
progressives who wanted him to challenge Biden for the nomination. Levin, whose
father and uncle both served in Congress for more than three decades, is an
observant Jew and a former synagogue president — a post now held by his son —
who, in 2022, was targeted by AIPAC for his relentless criticism of Israel’s
occupation of the West Bank and Gaza. (The group spent more than $4 million to
defeat him in a Democratic primary.)
To some on
the left, Levin’s combination of deep Michigan roots and defense of Palestinian
rights made him seem like a uniquely promising vehicle for antiwar energies. In
the left-wing magazine In These Times, the University of Chicago historian
Gabriel Winant floated the idea of drafting Levin to run against Biden,
writing, “The relationship between Israeli militarism and political
authoritarianism here at home is one that he understands intimately.”
Levin,
however, was uninterested. “I’m supporting Joe Biden. I’m super proud to have
served with him,” he told Politico, comparing this moment in American politics
to the political climate in Germany in 1932, when that country was on the cusp
of Nazism. Levin hasn’t changed his mind about the importance of Biden’s
re-election: By backing the “uncommitted” movement, he says, he’s trying to
save the president, not destroy him.
Levin
frames Listen to Michigan as a way for Democrats to express their outrage while
leaving the door open to return to the fold in November and thus a pragmatic
alternative to calls from a separate group of activists to abandon Biden. Many
of those working on Listen to Michigan, he said, are “people who feel like it’s
a pants-on-fire crisis that we have to change course on Gaza for substantive
reasons” and that doing so is the best way for Biden to beat Trump. “That’s a
beautiful thing, when practical political objectives line up with the right
thing to do,” he said.
There are
plenty of Democrats, in Michigan and elsewhere, who don’t see this alignment.
The state’s governor, Gretchen Whitmer, who has emerged as one of Biden’s
leading surrogates, argues that protest votes in Michigan’s primary will only
weaken Biden ahead of November. “Every vote that doesn’t support Joe Biden
makes it more likely we have a Trump presidency,” she told me.
But a
refusal to take disillusionment with Biden seriously could also make a Trump
presidency more likely. A recent survey by the Michigan-based polling firm
EPIC-MRA found that 53 percent of voters in the state and 74 percent of
Democrats favored a cease-fire in Gaza. That survey showed Trump ahead in
Michigan by four points, though that is equal to the poll’s margin of error.
“It points to a potential Trump win unless things dramatically change,” Bernie
Porn, a pollster for EPIC-MRA, told The Detroit Free Press.
Given how
catastrophic another Trump term would be — including in Israel, where the far
right fantasizes about his return — I find people who threaten to withhold
their votes from Biden maddening. But if Democrats want them to come around,
listening to them will be more effective than lecturing them.
Michelle
Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several
books about politics, religion and women’s rights, and was part of a team that
won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace
sexual harassment.
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