"Muslims overall represent only about 1% of the US electorate, but the electoral college makes them of outsized importance this year in a handful of swing states"
Muslims are not the only group with outsized importance in a handful of swing states: American Jews make up 3.3% of Pennsylvannia, 2.4% of Nevada, 1.7% of Colorado, 1.5% of Arizona, 1.1% of Minnesota and 0.9% of Michigan.
This article is not dry at all, but alarming. The insane Islamogauchist marriage, notably with the Greens, also meant the decline of the Labor Party in the Netherlands, which merged with these radicals. The only thing that unites them is their mechanical mantra against what they call 'islamophobia'.
I have read that, like Mr. Sunak, Mr. Starmer is a gormless centrist who is generally impelled by political expediency. With unchecked migration, that is likely a recipe for accommodations of the extremes—whether it is Islamism or something else, and whether it is Mr. Starmer or someone else.
Yet more evidence that the democracies’ un-vetted immigration policies are incubating Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations.
"Muslims overall represent only about 1% of the US electorate, but the electoral college makes them of outsized importance this year in a handful of swing states"
Muslims are not the only group with outsized importance in a handful of swing states: American Jews make up 3.3% of Pennsylvannia, 2.4% of Nevada, 1.7% of Colorado, 1.5% of Arizona, 1.1% of Minnesota and 0.9% of Michigan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Jews#By_state
Not to mention 8.7% of New York, where Republican Lee Zeldin got 46.8% of the vote for governor in 2022. Has Trump gotten less popular since then?
Democrats should choose a few candidates like Mohtin Ali in Leeds, UK to understand fully the effects of minority voting in swing states.
Very good point!
Thank you!
It's a real honor ; I've followed your work ever since reading "Infidel".
All the Best!!
Spot on, as usual.
This article is not dry at all, but alarming. The insane Islamogauchist marriage, notably with the Greens, also meant the decline of the Labor Party in the Netherlands, which merged with these radicals. The only thing that unites them is their mechanical mantra against what they call 'islamophobia'.
I have read that, like Mr. Sunak, Mr. Starmer is a gormless centrist who is generally impelled by political expediency. With unchecked migration, that is likely a recipe for accommodations of the extremes—whether it is Islamism or something else, and whether it is Mr. Starmer or someone else.