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Reaching the Power Elite: The Muslim American Lobby

By Omer Bin Abdullah
Journalist – Washington, DC

24/07/2003

The Supreme Court judgment notwithstanding, many Muslim Americans were proudly proclaiming that Florida’s Muslim voters sent George W. Bush to the White House. Bush was the candidate who had nudged toward Muslims and had promised to repeal the despised Secret Evidence law enacted during the Clinton presidency. Muslim Americans had an agenda to get the law that violated American principles – enshrined in the Bill of Rights and the Constitution – repealed.

On their part, the Republicans had also done their job by promoting an “Islamic Institute” headed by a Muslim Arab-American that espoused Republican causes and lobbied the Muslim vote.

The euphoria of the Bush victory was immense, and so was the disillusionment. On February 12, the American Muslim Council (AMC) and the Center for the Study of Islam and Democracy (CSID), two organizations with a deep interest in getting Muslims involved in the US political system, congratulated Bush and claimed that as many as 74% Muslim voters had supported him. However, many Muslims had started expressing their doubts even before the 43rd president’s inauguration.


The euphoria of the Bush victory was immense, and so was the disillusionment.


Even as Muslims sought to obtain recompense for their support, the memorandum they sent to the Bush transition team outlining the main policy recommendations was not assertive but pleading in its nature. They asked Washington to be nice to Muslims in its “own best interest.” A new policy for Iraq was requested that “meets the US security objectives without punishing the Iraqi people by economic sanctions.” There was yet again a call for Washington to be an “honest broker” in the Middle East and in Kashmir. In response, Bush bombed Iraq and drew closer to Hindu fundamentalist-ruled India.

Muslims had an eye on domestic policy. They hoped for appointments on the Commission on International Religious Freedom and the State Department. And some Muslims organized forwarding of resumes to the Bush transition team. The appointments never came.


Post-9/11 American Muslims’ sense of insecurity isolated them from overseas Muslim problems.


The post-September 11 scenario has affected lobbying priorities. Before that Muslim immigrants generally felt so safe in the US that they focused much of their political activism on helping Muslims overseas. Today, this is changing and quickly, and often to the detriment of genuine Muslim causes worldwide. For instance, AMC recently organized an imam training conference in Washington, where the dozen panel discussions at the meeting, only one dealt with an international issue: Iraq. Israel and the Palestinians were mentioned only fleetingly, while complaints about Attorney General John Ashcroft were plentiful in the speeches and comments from participants.

This new priority is not just a response to the government’s domestic reaction to September 11, Muslim leaders say. Souheil Ghannouchi, president of the Washington based Muslim American Society, sees a change which indicates that many Muslims are letting go the idea that they will someday go to their “native” countries.

Dr. Muqtedar Khan, a political scientist at Adrian College in Michigan and author of “American Muslims: Bridging Faith and Freedom,” warned “The American government itself has become a threat to our civil rights.”

Today, Muslim advocacy groups are searching for candidates in the 2004 elections who will give importance to Muslim civil rights problems in their campaigns.

The proceedings of the imam conference offer important insights. Raeed Tayeh, public affairs director for the Muslim American Society, in his Jum’a khutba (Friday speech at the mosque), told the imams that as they begin to deal with injustices in the US, learning how to navigate the American political system is “a matter of survival” for Muslim Americans.


Learning how to navigate the American political system is “a matter of survival” for Muslim Americans.


This change in the immigrant community is welcome for African Americans who, according to some estimates, comprise about one-third of Muslims in America. The indigenous Muslims have long desired Muslim immigrant Islamic leaders of ignoring pressing domestic issues involving African Americans. Indeed, African Americans with their immense exposure to the civil rights movement are a valuable asset in this effort.

Muslims are reaching across the religious lines to create and nurture partnerships. The Islamic Society of North America (ISNA) has a vibrant interfaith program, which helps introduce Muslim views and issues to a wide spectrum of American faiths. While ISNA is not a lobbying organization, several Muslim organizations are actively involved in lobbying issues.

The hot issue at present is the nomination of arch-Islamophobe Daniel Pipes to the federally funded think tank, the United States Institute of Peace. Muslim lobbying organizations are united in their stand against his nomination because it will not only feed the Administration with misinformation but also adversely affect the American image abroad.


African Americans comprise about one-third of Muslims in America.


The Council of American Islamic Relations (CAIR) has emerged as the strongest lobbying group, which is not only working with the federal structure, the Administration and Congress but also involved in local issues through its many branches.

CAIR has rightly concluded that Muslims need more than regularly political lobbying, but they also need to educate their fellow Americans about Islam. Thus, CAIR has launched a massive drive to place a set of Islam related books in the nation’s libraries.

The American Muslim Council (AMC), which was among the pioneer Muslim lobbying organizations, has not been so successful, and has a much reduced presence in the capital. It was recently moved to combine with another struggling organization, the American Muslim Alliance (AMA). They will now be known as the Muslim American Congress (MAC).


Muslim lobbying will require closer cooperation with minorities.


The situation seems dire as Muslims face another election in 2004. The Democratic slate is not only unpromising but also disappointing because with a couple of exceptions, all of the candidates have bent over backwards to locate a Jewish gene. The Bush campaign rolls forward, and now has a war chest of over $41 million, far more than the combined collections of all the Democratic candidates.

Muslim lobbying will require closer cooperation with the minorities. However, with the convergence of Indian and Israeli interests, the fast growing Indian lobby is another threat for the Muslims. The Indians in the American technology sector are not only high earners but are gaining influence in the US. Thus this lobby is not only highly financed but also very well connected through government and industry contacts. A look through Indian American ethnic newspapers reveals the growing government appointments of Indians. As opposed to this, Muslims can hardly boast of any significant Muslims in government, except one or two Muslim names who are more loyal that the king, like Zalmay Khalilzad.

The Muslim lobby will be increasingly faced with this opposition that is working in close tandem with the Israeli lobby.

The presence of fundamentalist governments in the US, India, and Israel only creates bigger challenges for Muslims.

The Israeli lobby, like the Christian fundamentalist lobby, is highly opposed to Muslim American rights and now they have a willing bedfellow in this venture, the Indian lobby.

Omer Bin Abdullah is a policy analyst and public relations specialist for a Washington, DC based lobbying organization. As a journalist, he serves as editor of Islamic Horizons--the largest circulating Muslim American English Language magazine.

The articles posted on this page reflect solely the opinions of the authors.

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