USA TODAY US Edition

Biden should heed protest vote over Gaza

- Sara Pequeño USA TODAY Follow USA TODAY elections columnist Sara Pequeño on X, formerly Twitter, @sara__pequeno and Facebook facebook.com/PequenoWri­tes

The Democratic Party received a message from Michigan voters Tuesday. The Biden campaign would be wise to take it seriously.

A month before the primary, progressiv­es in the state launched a campaign to have Democrats vote for the “uncommitte­d” option due to their disappoint­ment with how President Joe Biden has continued to support Israel in the ongoing conflict in Gaza.

Their goal was to get 10,000 people to vote against Biden. More than 100,000 people ended up casting ballots for “uncommitte­d,” making up 13.2% of the vote in the Democratic primary. He actually lost in Dearborn, a Detroit suburb with significan­t Arab American and Muslim population­s.

Why these voters are frustrated with Biden

It is a statement that Biden’s campaign would be remiss to ignore. The fact that more than 100,000 people went out of their way to vote in the primary at all instead of staying home shows growing discontent with the conflict, and the nation’s relationsh­ip with Israel.

More than 30,000 Palestinia­ns have died since fighting began after Oct. 7, when Hamas led an attack on Israel that killed 1,200.

In addition to the death toll, nearly 70,000 Palestinia­ns have been injured and roughly 1.7 million displaced.

In response, there have been protests across the United States demanding a cease-fire. The vote in Michigan occurred the day after an active-duty member of the Air Force self-immolated in front of the Israeli Embassy as a form of protest.

On Sunday, cease-fire talks took another setback after Israel refused to send a negotiatin­g team to Cairo, citing Hamas refusal to release the names of hostages who are still alive.

Meanwhile, there are increasing concerns about a potential famine and lack of clean water in the Gaza Strip.

The United States sends $3.8 billion to Israel each year for its military. The Senate recently approved $14.1 billion in additional aid to Israel; the same package splits $9.2 billion in humanitari­an aid among Gaza, Ukraine and other war zones.

Biden could bear the brunt of these decisions come November.

Voters have to choose between Biden and Trump

I don’t know what the administra­tion should or shouldn’t do with the situation in Gaza, but it’s clear that the conflict isn’t being resolved anytime soon, and recent polling reveals a growing number of Americans feel Israel has gone too far.

Whether it’s fair or not, the Biden campaign has to deal with how the president’s policy could impact his reelection effort and with the possibilit­y that the protest campaign in Michigan could continue through the election.

At the end of the day, the ongoing conflict in Gaza is just one issue that is mobilizing voters. If the fighting continues into November, constituen­ts will have to decide if standing on principle is worth the risk of reelecting Donald Trump, the self-described “most pro-Israel president ever.”

Biden’s challenge remains getting message to Democrats

If Biden is committed to negotiatin­g a cease-fire agreement between Israel and Hamas, he needs to make that clear to his voters.

The Biden administra­tion has begun airdroppin­g more supplies into Gaza, in addition to the more than $180 million in humanitari­an aid sent since Oct. 7.

The president has also warned against the potential Israeli invasion of Rafah, a city housing more than 1 million displaced Palestinia­ns.

These steps do not change the catastroph­e of the past few months, nor do they change Biden’s previous support of Israel. They are, however, steps in the right direction.

Biden should take the Michigan decision as a sign that this is something voters want to see action on. His campaign should see it as a poll on what voters in the United States want to see – and it’s clear that many want their president to be a stronger advocate for the Palestinia­ns suffering at the hands of a U.S. ally.

 ?? KEVIN DIETSCH/GETTY IMAGES ?? A Democratic voter uncommitte­d to President Joe Biden rallies outside a polling location in Dearborn, Mich., last Tuesday. In Michigan’s Democratic primary, more than 100,000 voted for “uncommitte­d.”
KEVIN DIETSCH/GETTY IMAGES A Democratic voter uncommitte­d to President Joe Biden rallies outside a polling location in Dearborn, Mich., last Tuesday. In Michigan’s Democratic primary, more than 100,000 voted for “uncommitte­d.”
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