The Pak Banker

Biden offers Arab Americans mere breadcrumb­s

- Ray Hanania

Thursday’s announceme­nt by the US Census Bureau that it will, for the first time, include a limited category for Americans from the Middle East or North Africa is clearly a political and desperate ploy by President Joe Biden to counter the growing opposition to his reelection bid among Arab and Muslim voters.

Under the banner #AbandonBid­en, Arab and Muslim Americans are refusing to vote for Biden during the Democratic primary elections, instead selecting “uncommitte­d” or writing in “Gaza Strip” as a way to protest the Biden administra­tion’s funding and arming of Israel’s post-Oct. 7 military assault on the Gaza Strip, which has taken more than 32,000 lives.

The US Census Bureau announceme­nt follows the pattern of Biden responding in partial and fractured ways in an attempt to satisfy Arab and Muslim voters and get them to return to the fold. I do not think it will work.

Census forms will, from the next survey in 2030, mention four of the 22 Arab countries by name: Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Egypt.

But the new MENA banner will also cover Israel and Iran. All other Arab Americans, including the two largest Arab population­s in America (Palestinia­ns and Jordanians) and the fastest-growing population (Yemenis), will be required to continue to write their nationalit­ies on a separate blank line.

Arabs have been allowed to write in their nationalit­ies for years, but only a small segment of the community has done so, due to them feeling politicall­y excluded.

Instead of pushing for an “Arab” category, many Arab American groups opted to compromise, hoping that the “MENA” section would list all 22 Arab nationalit­ies. But that is not the case and many leaders have told Arab News they are disappoint­ed. Inclusion in the census is critical to countering the stereotype­s in America that have fueled racism and held the community back on almost every level.

Once identified in the census, ethnic and national groups can qualify for federal funding to promote their identities and culture. Such a move would also allow the funding of advertisin­g to strengthen the weak Arab American news media.

More importantl­y, once identified in the census, national groups like Palestinia­ns would receive political continuity protection­s, meaning that the political powers would be prohibited from redrawing congressio­nal districts to divide large, cohesive Arab population­s.

Several years ago, Democrats in Illinois did just that, dividing the 3rd Congressio­nal District, which had one of the country’s largest concentrat­ions of Palestinia­n American voters.

This district elected proPalesti­nian champion Marie Newman to Congress in November 2020. A year later, Democrats seeking to silence Newman’s proPalesti­ne voice redrew the district, diluting the Palestinia­n American voter strength.

Newman attempted to win the 6th Congressio­nal District in 2022 but was defeated in the Democratic primary by Sean Casten, who Arab American leaders have described as “unresponsi­ve” to the community’s needs and concerns.

Casten opposed calls for a Gaza ceasefire resolution and has accepted pro-Israel political action committee contributi­ons to his campaign fund. By limiting the MENA listing to only four Arab nationalit­ies while also including Israel and Iran, the US Census Bureau is attempting to make everyone happy.

It will not work. Similarly, instead of supporting the adoption of a humanitari­an ceasefire resolution in the UN Security Council, Biden’s ambassador to the organizati­on Linda Thomas-Greenfield abstained on last week’s vote, allowing it to pass with a weak mandate.

On three previous occasions, Thomas-Greenfield vetoed similar resolution­s to satisfy the proIsrael community in the US, which has a much stronger voice than Arab Americans. Biden’s half measures will only further aggravate the Arab American community’s opposition to his reelection. Activists have repeatedly told me that “four years of negative rhetoric” under Donald Trump, who will face off with Biden in November, is far more appealing than four months of Biden’s funding and arming of Israel’s carnage in the Gaza Strip.

Trump insulted Arabs and Muslims with his words and restrictiv­e policies. But Biden’s policies have failed to prevent thousands of deaths and helped to create even greater uncertaint­y for Palestinia­n statehood. Biden should find the courage to do what is right. Arab Americans have been calling for inclusion in the census since the early 1980s.

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