New York Post

Couldn’t CAIR less

Why are progressiv­e pols still promoting an Islamist group that hates Israel?

- GREGORY T. ANGELO Gregory T. Angelo is the president of the New Tolerance Campaign.

HOW can any elected official still support CAIR? The Council on American-Islamic Relations has been problemati­c for years. The organizati­on’s ties to fundamenta­list group the Muslim Brotherhoo­d date back to the 1990s and have been a frequent point of criticism by politician­s for nearly three decades.

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

For years, allegation­s of terrorist links have been shrugged off by CAIR as anti-Muslim bigotry — a rebut long accepted by Democrats who have publicly embraced CAIR and its "mission" to combat Islamophob­ia in America. In 2019, more than 120 members of Congress wrote adoring letters lavishing praise on CAIR in commemorat­ion of the group’s 25th anniversar­y.

Two years later, those same elected officials were notably silent when NPR (not exactly a “far-right” news outlet) published a damning report chroniclin­g a culture of sexual harassment, misogyny, and discrimina­tion that spanned CAIR’s network of local chapters and extended all the way to their national headquarte­rs on Capitol Hill.

CAIR Florida chapter leader Hassan Shibly, for instance, resigned in 2021 following allegation­s by his estranged wife of an “abusive relationsh­ip” that became “unbearable.” His departure “emboldened a slew of women to come forward with their own accusation­s of emotional abuse and sexual misconduct,” the NPR story stated.

CAIR executive director Nihad Awad was himself accused of sexual harassment in a 2021 lawsuit by a former employee who outlined the many ways CAIR and its leaders “hold themselves out publicly as a civil rights organizati­on, while simultaneo­usly engaging in egregious and rampant sexual discrimina­tion, sexual harassment, sexual assault and religious discrimina­tion." The lawsuit also accused CAIR of retaliatin­g "against those who have either been victimized by such conduct or who have expressed concerns about it.”

Despite these controvers­ies, not a single politician has condemned CAIR. Whatever happened to #MeToo?

Peel back the layers of the onion and things begin to stink even more.

In 2018, Latina theologian and interfaith activist Karen Leslie Hernandez was terminated from CAIR chapter leadership under the pretext that she was “not Muslim.” Court documents attest that the true reason for her dismissal was because Awad “was upset that [Hernandez] spoke openly online about being a survivor of domestic violence.”

Two years earlier, more than half of CAIR’s national office staff sought to unionize via the Service Employees Internatio­nal Union (SEIU). Awad shut down those efforts, prompting SEIU Local 500 to issue a statement on Twitter saying it was “[d]isappointe­d that a civil rights group like CAIR is trying to stop its employees from even voting on having a union,” and later calling CAIR “hypocrites” for thwarting unionizati­on.

Whither thee, Elizabeth Warren? The outspoken pro-union US Senator didn’t utter a peep about CAIR’s union-busting, but did write a gushing letter to the organizati­on in 2019, declaring she can “count on CAIR as a strong partner” in the fights for “civil rights, educating our fellow Americans, and empowering our communitie­s.”

The lack of CAIR condemnati­on from politician­s has been disappoint­ing. But after Awad’s fullthroat­ed backing of Hamas and the brutal slaughter of more than 1,200 Israeli civilians on Oct. 7, silence has become unacceptab­le.

On Dec. 7, in a public forum, Awad declared he was “happy to see” the Oct. 7 terrorist massacre in Israel. The statement was so heartless that even the White House was compelled to publicly disavow CAIR. Strong stuff, especially after the Biden Administra­tion had the gall to include CAIR in its National Strategy to Counter Anti Semitism strategy only months prior.

At the time, President Biden’s US Special Envoy for Monitoring and Combating Antisemiti­sm Deborah Lipstadt defended the CAIR collaborat­ion. She dismissed its past indiscreti­ons and stated that, moving forward, groups such as CAIR will be asked to “acknowledg­e that you might have, or might not have, engaged in statements or declaratio­ns that were easily and rightfully considered to be antisemiti­c?” Is now a good time to ask, Ambassador?

Soon after Awad’s hateful remarks last October, my group, the New Tolerance Campaign, deployed mobile billboards in Washington, DC naming and shaming the U.S. Senators on record for supporting CAIR. Three days later, the page on CAIR’s website listing their elected official supporters was quietly deleted.

That web page may be gone, but the names that used to populate it are not forgotten. Politician­s who endorsed CAIR in the past have a duty to condemn the organizati­on now. If they don’t, the press and the public have a responsibi­lity to ask them why.

Given its sordid history, support for CAIR by politician­s has always been baffling. Now, it’s simply inexcusabl­e.

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 ?? ?? Minnesota Dem Rep. Ilhan Omar (left) and fellow firebrand Rep. Rashida Tlaib (second from right) pose with Council on American-Islamic Relations President Nihad Awad, an outspoken Israel foe (inset).
Minnesota Dem Rep. Ilhan Omar (left) and fellow firebrand Rep. Rashida Tlaib (second from right) pose with Council on American-Islamic Relations President Nihad Awad, an outspoken Israel foe (inset).
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