Pissed off Arab and Muslim voters in New Jersey divided on which candidate will deliver change

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Pissed off Arab and Muslim voters in New Jersey divided on which candidate will deliver change

Fifty-year-old Maged Judeh initially didn’t need to vote in Tuesday’s US election, he stated whereas exiting the South Paterson library neighborhood heart polling location in New Jersey.

Judeh, a Venezuelan Palestinian Muslim American, has lived for over 25 years in Paterson, a metropolis with one of many largest Muslim and Arab populations in the US. His father survived the 1948 Nakba – when greater than 700,000 Palestinians have been expelled or fled from their houses within the struggle surrounding Israel’s creation. Due to Israel’s present struggle in Gaza, which is funded with substantial US assist, Judeh stated he has been utterly turned off by each main political events.

“At all times the identical colour, the identical system,” stated Judeh, referring to Republicans and Democrats. “It’s gonna be at all times the identical factor, particularly what occurs in Palestine.”

Like a number of different Arab and Muslim voters on the library that day, Judeh determined to vote for Dr Jill Stein of the Inexperienced occasion. Stein has been forceful in condemning what she describes as Israel’s genocide in Gaza and has referred to as for a right away ceasefire, an finish to the territory’s blockade, humanitarian help, and the discharge of hostages and political prisoners, in accordance to her platform.

Each Democrats and Republicans have acquired criticism for his or her failure to meaningfully tackle the struggle in Gaza, a precedence subject for Muslim and Arab Individuals. Donald Trump has voiced assist for Israel’s struggle in Gaza a number of occasions, whereas concurrently promising to finish the struggle. And Kamala Harris, as a part of the Biden administration, has continued to produce arms to Israel’s army and failed to barter a ceasefire settlement.

Volunteers arrange a telephone financial institution on the Arab American Neighborhood Heart in Clifton, New Jersey, on Tuesday. {Photograph}: Kholood Eid/The Guardian

I don’t see [why it] at all times needs to be two events. What concerning the those who assume completely different, like me? I don’t assume like Democrat or Republican. I need a change,” Judeh stated. “So this variation could possibly be the third occasion.”

Paterson, colloquially often known as Little Palestine, is house to upwards of fifty,000 Arab and Muslim folks in whole. A lot of the Paterson voters the Guardian spoke to stated that they voted due to the choice of a third-party candidate and the need to make their issues about Palestine heard.

Adel Ahelawi, a 58-year-old Palestinian American who was born in Jordan, finally voted for Harris regardless of his issues about her stance on Palestine. “I’m not even 100% certain,” he stated. “However she’s one of the best of the worst.” Ahelawi, who additionally labored at a polling place in Paterson on Tuesday, added that he discovered Harris to be “a bit extra involved” than Donald Trump about humanitarian points in Gaza, together with lack of entry to meals and medication.

Trump, Ahelawi stated, will “most likely change Israel’s maps like the best way they need it”.

The college psychologist Wijdan Abdallah, a Palestinian initially from the West Financial institution, spent election day volunteering at a telephone banking occasion hosted by the Palestinian American Neighborhood Heart (PACC) in Clifton, New Jersey. Over 3,000 calls have been made to residents in Paterson throughout Tuesday’s occasion. Abdallah, who has voted for the Democratic occasion in earlier elections, had thought-about abstaining from voting, however finally determined to vote for the Inexperienced occasion after researching its stance on Palestine. She hopes that voting for a third-party candidate will assist the occasion safe sufficient votes to entry federal funding.

“Having solely two choices right here in America appeared prefer it wasn’t sufficient any extra,” she stated. “What we now have skilled when it got here to the financial system, what we now have skilled when it got here to genocide, it was simply not sufficient.”

Abdallah stated that many Palestinians she spoke to in Paterson have been “pissed off”. “They might say, ‘Nicely, yeah, I’m registered to vote, however I don’t know [who] to vote for. They each assist the genocide. It’s not going to make a distinction.’”

Farouk Sheiks, a Palestinian American voter, exterior a polling location in Patterson, New Jersey. {Photograph}: Kholood Eid/The Guardian

Youness Haddadi, a 44-year-old college bus driver from Morocco who solid his poll for Stein on the neighborhood heart, stated he at all times knew he would vote, simply not for Harris. I’ve to see my vote. My vote needs to be there,” stated Haddadi, who has lived in Paterson for over 45 years.

Haddadi added that a lot of his pals had reached an analogous choice to assist a third-party candidate versus not voting in any respect. “All my pals are voting right now. They’ve [the] similar concept that I’ve. Collectively, we [make] this choice to get to impartial, simply to inform them [that] what’s occurring abroad will not be acceptable in any respect,” he stated, referring to Harris and Trump. “We don’t feed the indignant for different international locations.”

Farouk Sheiks, the proprietor of an area health heart and third-party candidate supporter, additionally stated that voting was “very, very, essential” to him as a Palestinian given the “genocide that’s happening in Palestine proper now and Lebanon”.

“We’ve got to come back out and vote and let these politicians know that what’s happening there wants to finish proper now and must cease. We have to cease the genocide,” stated 50-year-old Sheiks exterior of the neighborhood heart.

Sitting out the election will not be a “good choice”, stated Sheiks, who acknowledged the wrestle he and others really feel given US assist of Israel’s struggle in Gaza.

“We wish all people to vote. Doesn’t matter who. Simply vote,” Sheiks stated. “However I say, vote for the lesser evil.”

Learn extra of the Guardian’s 2024 US election protection


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