US presidential elections, here’s how much the Islamic vote is worth

L’Islam will play an important role both in the next European elections and in the crucial ones US elections. In France and in the countries of Northern Europe, the large radical Islamic communities are true …

US presidential elections, here's how much the Islamic vote is worth

L’Islam will play an important role both in the next European elections and in the crucial ones US elections. In France and in the countries of Northern Europe, the large radical Islamic communities are true states within states, and the right that dominates the polls is very clear that one of the focal points that will dominate politics in the coming years will be the fight against Islamization of Europe. It is no coincidence that Eric Zemmour’s party, which has made this theme its strong point, is called “reconquest”.

The USA does not have large Islamic communities like those of many European states, but history has it that some of the American states with a larger Muslim population they are right Michigan And Minnesota, crucial to winning the White House. The Muslim vote has always existed strongly democratic, it is no coincidence that the two deputies who made their Muslim identity a flag (Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib) were elected precisely in these two states. Not only that, pro-Islamism is a cornerstone of the radical leftunleashed against the atrocities of the straight white male and in love with the idea of ​​the Muslim partisan who resists Western imperialism, who also protects us from those who would like us all to be McDonald’s clerks.

THE problems inside the Democratic party are growing with the prolongation of the war in Gaza, the divisions between the “classical” component always faithful to the Jewish state and the pro-Arab woke one can really undermine the stability of the party. On Tuesday some MPs supporting Israel abandoned an important Democratic event in view of Biden’s candidacy. The Washington Times reported that precisely Rashida Tlaib is urging voters in his district not to vote for Biden in the primaries, thus nullifying the meeting that Biden himself had held in Michigan two weeks ago with representatives of the Muslim communities to try to calm the waters.

These are not simple party skirmishes, to get an idea of ​​how much these dynamics weigh, just think that in 2016 Trump won Michigan by 9,000 votes, and in 2020 Biden won it, obtaining 50.62%. A partial abstention from the Islamic community, which numbers almost 250 thousand people in the state, could be decisive for an entire election. The Muslim world, both in the Middle East and in the West, is diverse and internally conflicted. Despite this, aversion to Israel is a point common to everyone, and since votes are counted, in the USA will be crucial its role in the next presidential elections.