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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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July 27, 2018
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Michigan's
Regressive "Progressive" Gubernatorial Candidate
IPT News
July 27, 2018
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While polls show him
lagging in third place in a three-candidate primary,
Abdul El-Sayed promises to shock the political world Aug. 7 by becoming
Michigan's Democratic nominee for governor.
He's running an ambitious campaign that mirrors the success political
novice Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez used to knock off incumbent U.S. Rep. Joe Crowley last month in
a New York primary. Volunteers are knocking on thousands of doors. His
platform calls for a universal health care for all Michigan residents and
free college tuition for students whose parents make less than $150,000.
He has campaigned in a t-shirt that reads, "Abolish
ICE."
The 33-year-old Rhodes Scholar earned his medical degree at Columbia
University and ran Detroit's public health system before seeking office.
The Detroit News describes him as a "far-left Democrat"
running on a Bernie Sanders-like progressive agenda.
Sanders endorsed El-Sayed Wednesday, praising the candidate's
healthcare proposals and saying El-Sayed would "fight for a government
in Lansing that represents all the people, and not just wealthy special
interests." Ocasio-Cortez also endorsed him and agreed to campaign with him this weekend.
El-Sayed is trying to become the nation's first Muslim governor. That
might be a nice milestone. But his connections and actions over the years
indicate that – while his political agenda is "progressive," his
core beliefs are rooted in very conservative Sunni ideology.
For starters, his candidacy has been embraced by Linda Sarsour, a rabidly anti-Israel activist who looks up to extremist clerics and who served as a key Sanders surrogate in 2016.
"This is the new face of democracy - fresh, young, progressive and
unapologetic," Sarsour wrote in a Feb. 1 Facebook post. "He will not be
deterred. The movement that has been built will not be deterred. Moving
forward and on the way to making history. Abdul El-Sayed, we got you."
In addition to her political activities, Sarsour is a frequent speaker
at Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) fundraisers. While it touts
itself as a civil rights organization, CAIR was created by Muslim Brotherhood members in the United
States to join a network of charities and other groups charged with helping Hamas politically and financially.
Evidence to prove this came out during a 2008
Hamas-financing prosecution in Dallas. FBI policy since then prohibits formal interaction with CAIR except in
criminal investigations. Still, El-Sayed spoke last October at CAIR's 23rd
annual banquet and fundraiser in Arlington, Va.
El-Sayed's connections with Muslim Brotherhood-tied groups date back at
least to his college days. He served as the University of Michigan's Muslim Students Association vice president. MSA was
created in 1963 by Muslim Brotherhood members who came to the United States
to complete their education. An MSA history acknowledges that its founders saw a
"responsibilty (sic) of spreading Islam as students in North America.
The main goal was always Da'wah [proselytizing]."
Da'wah is a key element of the Muslim Brotherhood's ultimate ambition to
spread the faith globally and create a world governed by sharia. "It
is the nature of Islam to dominate, not to be dominated," wrote
Brotherhood founder Hassan al-Banna, "to impose its law on all nations
and to extend its power to the entire planet.
Five years after graduating, El-Sayed stood by the Brotherhood in Egypt
as it moved to consolidate its new-found power. Led by President Mohamed
Morsi, the Brotherhood's political parties rose to power in 2012 after Arab Spring protests led to
dictator Hosni Mubarak's fall. Months late, Morsi declared near-absolute power in an edict that led to a
purge of the military, police and media. The over-reach led to another
popular uprising, with millions of demonstrators in the street by the
following summer. Morsi was ousted July 1, 2013.
But El-Sayed, a dual American and Egyptian citizen, didn't see a
problem with Morsi's power grab. He lent his name to a Nov. 25, 2012
statement supporting the move.
"We, leaders of the Egyptian community support the revolutionary
decisions taken by the president, and we demand a purging of the media and
the police as soon as possible," an IPT translation of the Arabic statement said. "We do not hide that we do
not fear the existence of such powers in the hands of the President. We
would like the President to clarify that this constitutional declaration
will ends [sic] once the writing the Constitution has been finished. We
confirm that we as Egyptians Americans strongly reject those voices which
are seducing America and Europe to take a stand against the Egyptian
regime. We will stand shoulder to shoulder in support of the elected president."
Others standing "shoulder to shoulder in support" include
CAIR, the Muslim American Society – also created by Muslim Brotherhood members in the
United States – and Islamic Relief. El-Sayed's name included a reference to
him being in New York in 2012. His resume shows he was working at that time as a project
coordinator at Columbia University's Department of Epidemiology.
El-Sayed may not have much to advance these kinds of issues as
Michigan's governor. And a new poll out Friday morning gives him 19 percent
support among primary voters, less than half expected to go to front-runner
Gretchen Whitmer. But first-time candidates, especially young ones, often
wage statewide campaigns to increase their name recognition and build a
political organization to set up future runs. Win or lose, we likely
haven't seen the last of Abdul El-Sayed.
Related Topics: Elections
/ Campaigns, Abdul
El-Sayed, Michigan
governor's race, Bernie
Sanders, Linda
Sarsour, CAIR,
Muslim
Brotherhood, Hassan
al-Banna, Muslim
Students Association, da'wah,
Mohamed
Morsi
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