US AP: Biden reelection campaign team gets shunned by some Arab American leaders while visiting Michigan

Biden reelection campaign team gets shunned by some Arab American leaders while visiting Michigan
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Joey Cappelleti and Will Weissert
2024-01-27 03:18:02GMT


DEARBORN, Mich. (AP) — President Joe Biden’s campaign manager traveled to suburban Detroit on Friday, where many Arab Americans are enraged over the administration’s Israel policy, and found a number of community leaders unwilling to meet with her — exposing a growing rift between the White House and key groups often otherwise loyal to Democrats in a critical swing state.

Julie Chavez Rodriguez led a group of campaign advisers to the Dearborn area, as part of her ongoing effort to meet with core supporter groups around the country.

She spoke throughout the day with some Arab American community leaders. But Rodriguez’s trip ended when a late afternoon meeting with Arab American leaders was canceled after everyone invited — between 10 and 15 people — declined to show up.

Other activists went beyond simply not showing up for Rodriguez, as leaders from “Abandon Biden,” a movement discouraging voters from supporting the president in November, spoke to hundreds of people at a local mosque in anticipation of the campaign manager’s visit.

Both developments highlight the acute challenges the president’s campaign faces as it tries to sure up support among Arab Americans, whose votes will be key in Michigan during November’s election but who have turned on Biden given his full-throated support for Israel in its war with Hamas.

Community leaders said that Rodriguez originally came to Michigan planning a larger meeting with Arab Americans but settled for the series of smaller gatherings, including the one where no invitees ultimately showed up, because of pushback to the original plan. Assad I. Turfe, a deputy Wayne County executive, said he was tasked with coordinating the original meeting, but that it was abandoned due to lack of interest.

Turfe said he reached out to more than 10 Arab American and Muslim leaders after being contacted by the Biden campaign on Wednesday. The leaders then spoke with community members, Turfe said, who made it clear they did not want them meeting Rodriguez.

“I don’t believe that the Biden administration, at the senior top level, understands how big of a problem this is and how upset and angry the community is,” Turfe said.

Fighting between Israel and Hamas has inflamed tensions between Jews and Muslims around the world. But it has had especially deep resonance in the Detroit area, which is home to several heavily Jewish suburbs and to Dearborn, the city with the country’s largest concentration of Arab Americans.

Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud took to X, formerly Twitter, to sarcastically note Rodriguez’s trip while criticizing Biden for urging congressional approval of fighter jets to Turkey.

“Little bit of advice — if you’re planning on sending campaign officials to convince the Arab American community on why they should vote for your candidate, don’t do it on the same day you announce selling fighter jets to the tyrants murdering our family members,” Hammoud wrote.

The mayor’s office confirmed that he was invited to meet with Rodriguez but didn’t accept. Two Democratic state representatives, Alabas Farhat and Abraham Aiyash, were also invited but unable to attend.

“It’s unrealistic to expect that political conversations will resecure our support for the president when only a ceasefire can truly reopen that door,” Farhat said in a statement, referring to calls for halting the fighting in Gaza.

Aiyash, the second-ranking Democrat in the Michigan House, said he’s reached out to Biden officials multiple times to discuss the escalating tensions in his state’s Arab American community. He said he’d yet to hear from them, even as Chavez Rodriguez visited.

“The conclusion that I’ve drawn from this is they don’t really see this as a legitimate problem,” said Aiyash, who is also the state’s highest-ranking Arab or Muslim leader. “And it’s disturbing at best and, at worst, it’s extremely dismissive and disrespectful.”

A person familiar with Rodriguez’s schedule, who spoke on condition of anonymity to share details that weren’t made public, said the campaign manager held multiple meetings across suburban Detroit that have been in the works for weeks. They included talking with elected officials and leaders from the state’s Arab and Palestinian American, Hispanic and Black communities.

Osama Siblani, publisher of the Arab American News, met with Rodriguez at the paper’s Dearborn headquarters for an hour and a half and said it went “very well.”

While Siblani said he received pressure to cancel the meeting, he felt it was important because Rodriguez made the effort to come to the community and listen.

“She was very attentive, and she was listening. We looked each other in the eye and I told her exactly what’s going on,” Siblani said. “And she said she would take it to the president.”

Still, the separate, larger meeting scheduled for late afternoon on Friday with Arab Americans saw everyone invited cancel, the person familiar with Rodriguez’s schedule said.

Her trip was part of the Biden reelection campaign’s — and the administration’s — continuing dialogue with core constituency groups. Senior Biden campaign staffers have had similar meetings and roundtable discussions with such groups across the country and in key swing states since last fall, the person said.

But political tensions are running higher in Michigan than many other places — and the chilly reception Rodriguez received from many suggests a growing political headache for Biden in a key state.

“People in the community, like community leaders, don’t want to meet with Mr. Biden,” said Dawud Walid, the executive director of Michigan’s chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Imad Hamad, director of the American Human Rights Council in Dearborn, said that many community leaders were reluctant to meet with the Biden campaign unless it was to discuss “practical steps that give the community a reason to reconsider.”

Hamad added that many in the community felt that Friday’s visit was more about political optics than achieving real understanding of activists concerns because “none of the people who have been the most vocal were approached or invited” to meet with Rodriguez and her team.

Meanwhile, hundreds gathered at the Islamic Center of Detroit for a Friday prayer service led by prominent civil rights activist Imam Omar Suleiman. Afterward, leaders of the “Abandon Biden” movement spoke to the crowd.

Biden “has lost the Muslim and Arab vote. “Every poll indicates that,” Suleiman told The Associated Press. “And if you were to speak to any person in this mosque, you would hear the exact same thing,”
 
What makes you say that. The foryifying wad blatant and obvious in 2020 by numbers that made no sense. All it takes is the same legal system that wants Trump locked up looking the other wsy…and boom.
2020 was close. Michigan for example, with fortification, was a ~3% point difference, which probably meant in reality a ~1% difference similar to 2016. Same thing applied to Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, and Georgia, with the last three states in particular needing nearly two weeks of blatantly illegal ballot harvesting to make up the difference.

The moment you start reaching double digits like these polls are - and mainstream media ones at that (!!!) - is the moment the traditional means of saving Our Democracy™️ go out the window. IMO it's why the the usual suspects are desperately chasing an insurrection conviction: they have nothing else through which to quickly claw Trump's numbers back down to where fortification is possible.
 
They can't stop stepping on rakes...

US Muslim group condemns Pelosi for saying Gaza ceasefire protests have Russia link
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Kanishka Singh
2024-01-28 20:45:13GMT

WASHINGTON, Jan 28 (Reuters) - A U.S. Muslim group criticized former House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi on Sunday after she suggested, without offering evidence, that some protesters demanding a ceasefire in Gaza could be linked to Russia and urged the FBI to investigate.

Her comments were dismissed as "unsubstantiated smears" by the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), who said such remarks amounted to dehumanization of the Palestinian people.

Pelosi made the remarks in a CNN interview after she was asked whether opposition to President Joe Biden's policy in the war in Gaza could hurt the Democrat in November's presidential election.

"For them to call for a ceasefire is Mr. Putin's message, Mr. Putin's message. Make no mistake, this is directly connected to what he (Russian President Vladimir Putin) would like to see," Pelosi told CNN.

"I think some of these protesters are spontaneous, and organic, and sincere. Some I think are connected to Russia," she said. "Some financing should be investigated and I want to ask the FBI to investigate that."

Pelosi's comments marked the first time a prominent U.S. lawmaker has accused Russia's leader of backing U.S. protesters calling for a ceasefire.

The Russian embassy in Washington was not immediately available to comment.

Protests demanding a ceasefire in Gaza have recently occurred across the U.S. including near airports and bridges in New York City and Los Angeles, vigils outside the White House and marches in Washington. Demonstrators have also interrupted Biden speeches and events.

The protests have been organized by a range of human rights, Jewish and anti-war activist groups.

"It is unconscionable that an individual with such influence in this nation would spread unsubstantiated smears targeting those who seek an end to the slaughter of civilians in Gaza and a just resolution to that conflict," said Ibrahim Hooper, a spokesperson for CAIR.

Pelosi's comments "echo a time in our nation when opponents of the Vietnam War were accused of being communist sympathizers and subjected to FBI harassment," CAIR National Executive Director Nihad Awad added.

When asked about the protests against Biden's policy in Gaza, Democratic U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez told NBC News on Sunday that opposition by many to the war was based on "the indiscriminate loss of life" in the region.

The U.N. has demanded an immediate humanitarian ceasefire in Gaza, but Washington has vetoed resolutions for such calls in the United Nations Security Council, saying it would let Palestinian Islamist group Hamas, which governs Gaza, regroup and rebuild.

Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel killed 1,200 people, according to Israeli tallies. Israel's subsequent assault on Gaza has killed more than 26,000 Palestinians, over 1% of the 2.3 million population there, according to Gaza's health ministry. Many are feared buried in rubble.

Israeli bombardments have flattened much of the densely populated enclave, leaving most Gazans homeless, sparking food shortages that threaten famine and incapacitating most hospitals.

Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington Editing by Heather Timmons, Matthew Lewis and Lisa Shumaker
 
>allow Muslims in
>They celebrate terrorist attacks on innocent people including other Muslims and arabs
>Get mad when terrorists aren't able to get away with it and they're being wiped out

Nice job you have an entire state where people with hasanabis opinions now matter
Terrorism is how big noses were able to build their state on what was British/Arab land, it's weird to see them condemn this practice now.
 
What are they going to do? Vote Republican? lol

As a former Dem who feels abandoned by the party on most issues, it's sort of nice to see some of Dems' sacred castes feeling politically homeless. Muslims in particular since they never should have been embraced by a party that claims to care about women, gays, and blacks.
 
Is it? Aren't hispanics the rapidly growing demographic in the US, and they all vote D except the cubans?
The older generations are christian or claim to be. Its the younger generations that all appear to be going atheist or at least non-religious, and this trend is true across all democrat voter demographics.
 
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What are they going to do? Vote Republican? lol

As a former Dem who feels abandoned by the party on most issues, it's sort of nice to see some of Dems' sacred castes feeling politically homeless. Muslims in particular since they never should have been embraced by a party that claims to care about women, gays, and blacks.
Simply not voting is enough, actually.
 
How come all I hear recently is that "Dearborn, Michigan = Muslim vote"?

I was watching Due Dissidence on YT the other day, two former Democrats who had raised money to cover 2024 election stuff on the ground as independents.

One of their crowdfunded voting options on how to spend the monies was to go to Dearborn to get the Muslim perspective (the others were going to the DNC convention in Chicago or covering the Assange trial in London).
 
How come all I hear recently is that "Dearborn, Michigan = Muslim vote"?

I was watching Due Dissidence on YT the other day, two former Democrats who had raised money to cover 2024 election stuff on the ground as independents.

One of their crowdfunded voting options on how to spend the monies was to go to Dearborn to get the Muslim perspective (the others were going to the DNC convention in Chicago or covering the Assange trial in London).
Dearborn is pretty much a mohammadian colony.
 
How come all I hear recently is that "Dearborn, Michigan = Muslim vote"?

Dearborn is pretty much a mohammadian colony.

As @Sexy Peach Emoji said, Dearborn has a large Muslim population. I want to say the city may be majority Muslim demographic wise, but I'm not 100% sure. Still, it's one of the larger Muslim areas outside the Middle East. Perhaps some may not vote for president if they find either candidate undesirable. However, the fact they are publicly declaring their lack of interest in Biden has left the Democrats with a shocked Pikachu face because the latter considers the former one of their go-to voting blocs.

Dearborn is also adjacent to the western end of Detroit and surrounded by suburbs on the rest of its perimeter. It's home to Ford Headquarters, a University of Michigan branch campus, and a community college. As such, people of all sorts of backgrounds come into the city for one reason or another. In the past, people largely got along with each other despite their diverse backgrounds. With the increased push on identity politics and polarized opinions regarding the Middle East situation, though, there's a chance those interpersonal relationships might be more strained right now.
 
Oh wow I can't believe the people who see their distant cousins (which they never ever help btw) get bombed by a US-backed and funded ethnostate in the middle east wont vote for the guy who right now is threatening congress because he wants to send more money to say ethnostate that's bombing muslims so they can keep doing it...
as their taxes pay for more military aid
None of these people pay taxes. One of the problems of no longer doing forced assimilation is that people in these communities don't contribute shit to the nation since they don't feel like part of it even if they get gibs from it.

See that video from france (which I can't find since youtube clearly memoryholed it) where the news asks a bunch of "new french" kids who identifies as french and of a room of 20 or more only 3 raised their hands. They all had french citizenship BTW, that's all they care about, papers and gibs.

All the aging euros hoping ahmed and ngubu will pay for their retirement are gonna be sorely disappointed.
the fact is that John "Stewart" Leibowitz's "don't fight each other, team up and get Whitey!" is a powerful drug
What's ironic is that he actually looks whiter than the average American white nowadays, those blue eyes are gonna get him clubbed to death with a tire iron by a proud black man getting back at whitey.
Aren't hispanics the rapidly growing demographic in the US
Yeah but they are mostly catholic, old school, no white guilt, they think that pius pope that didn't do anything about the holocaust was actually based and they really don't like jews at all. The handful of very poor mostly ex-con evangelical latinos wont change the fact that jews are supporting the demographic change that will turn them into pariahs again.
 
I'm not at all surprised to see the sand fleas who don't even know their own holy book bitching about this. But that's most of them, since like their fellow religious semites, they follow a man-made book rather than the original text that isn't nearly as bonkers as the latter fan fiction. And I say this as a Jew (who doesn't follow said fan fiction and really doesnt like the shitty ones in higher positions).

I love Muslims like I love all people, as we're all created in God's image. But this is pretty funny, seeing multiples parts of Biden's base get riled up like this.

Alas, Michigan is a hellhole, and will likely continue down the hole until they stop voting blue. But that's as unlikely as Chicago, NYC, and California doing so, I feel.
 
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So how many suitcases of cash are they going to hand out to try and sway the Muslims?

Biden is sending aides to Michigan to see Arab American and Muslim leaders over the Israel-Hamas war
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Aamer Madhani, Joey Cappelletti, and Seung Min Kim
2024-02-07 21:23:36GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden is sending senior aides to Michigan on Thursday to meet with Arab American and Muslim leaders, according to three people familiar with the matter, as his administration’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war frustrates members of a key constituency in a 2024 battleground state.

Some community leaders invited to the meeting said they welcome the opportunity to make their case directly to top Biden aides to use the administration’s leverage on Israel to press for an immediate cease-fire and allow more humanitarian relief into Gaza.

“I’m going into that room and making it clear that the frustrations are that a cease-fire needs to be called,” said Michigan state Rep. Alabas Farhat. adding that there also needs to be a release of hostages held by Hamas and Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

The meeting could give the administration a chance to try to mend ties with a community that has an important role in deciding whether the president can hold on to a crucial swing in his campaign for a second term.

Biden has faced stiff criticism from the state’s sizable Arab American and Muslim population since the start of the war on Oct. 7. Some activists even called for members of the community not to vote for the Democrat in November.

“I’m for the dialogue and I believe we owe it to our country and to our community and the people in Gaza, to listen and be heard,” Osama Siblani, publisher of the Arab American News based in Dearborn, Michigan, told The Associated Press. Siblani said he was invited by the White House and planned to attend.

Administration officials making the trip to Michigan include Samantha Power, head of the U.S. Agency for International Development, principal deputy national security adviser Jon Finer and Steven Benjamin, who directs the Office of Public Engagement, a White House official said.

All who discussed the plans were not authorized to do so publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. The officials did not offer any details about the community members expected to attend.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre declined to confirm details of the Michigan meeting, but said the administration has been consistent in outreach efforts to U.S. communities impacted by the war.

“Obviously, we’re going to listen and hear what leaders of that community” have to say, Jean-Pierre said. “We are open to that, having a real honest dialogue.”

Others expected to attend the meeting are Tom Perez, who leads the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs, as well as Mazen Basrawi, the White House liaison to American Muslim communities, and aides Jamie Citron and Dan Koh.

Biden’s campaign manager, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, and other campaign aides went to suburban Detroit late last month, but found a number of community leaders unwilling to meet with them.

Other community activists have gone even further as they press their disapproval of the president’s handling of the war and have formed a group called “Abandon Biden,” a movement discouraging voters from supporting the president in November.

Siblani, the newspaper publisher, was one of the few Arab American leaders to meet with Rodriguez when she visited Dearborn at the end of January. He told AP at the time that he felt that was important because she made the effort to come to the community and listen.

Farhat said he expected Thursday’s meeting to be the first in a series and “a new channel being opened up directly to the White House.” While the meetings are a step forward, Farhat said, “it’s not a substitute for a cease-fire or policy change.”

U.S. Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Mich., a longtime resident of Dearborn and close Biden ally, said that she believed the meetings represented important progress.

“I have lived in this community for 40 years and this is the most significant White House delegation I’ve seen come into Michigan in those 40 years,” Dingell said in an interview Wednesday.

The White House says administration officials have been in regular contact with Muslim and Arab American leaders in Michigan and across the country.

Michigan holds the largest concentration of Arab Americans in the nation and over 310,000 residents are of Middle Eastern or North African ancestry.

Many in the community have expressed anger that Biden hasn’t called for a permanent cease-fire in the 4-month-old war that has killed more than 27,000 people in Gaza, according to the Health Ministry in the Hamas-ruled territory.

Israel began its military operation after Hamas on Oct. 7 launched attacks that killed some 1,200 in Israel. More than 240 people in Israel were captured and taken into Gaza. The U.S. believes more than 100 remain in captivity.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken was visiting Tel Aviv as part of a Mideast trip visit aimed at pushing forward negotiations brokered by the U.S., Egypt and Qatar for an extended pause in fighting in exchange for the release of the remaining hostages. U.S. officials believe such a deal could set a path to end the war.

But the effort appeared to suffer a setback as Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday rejected terms set by Hamas and called their demands “delusional.” Hamas has called for the hostages to be released in exchange for hundreds of Palestinians imprisoned by Israel, including senior militants, and an end to the war.

Biden was in Michigan last week for a visit with union workers. He did not meet with Arab American and Muslim community members. As Biden met with the United Auto Workers, dozens of pro-Palestinian demonstrators stood near the UAW Region 1 building in Warren and made their frustrations clear.

During that visit, Dearborn Mayor Abdullah Hammoud said the White House had yet to have “a meaningful conversation for how you change course.”

Hammoud previously turned down a meeting with Biden’s campaign manager, but his office said in a statement that he had accepted the White House invitation to meet with officials on Thursday.

The statement added that the mayor intended to “engage in conversation about policy change, centering on the lived experiences of the people of Gaza and amplifying the demands of the Dearborn community.”

Plans for the Thursday meeting were first reported by CNN.
 
In Private Remarks to Arab Americans, Biden Aide Expresses Regrets on Gaza
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Reid J. Epstein and Erica L. Green
2024-02-10 02:41:28GMT
Subtitle: In a closed-door meeting, the aide offered some of the administration’s clearest notes of contrition for its response to the Gaza war, a sign of rising Democratic pressure on President Biden.

gaza01.jpg
A protest outside the Henry Hotel in Dearborn, Mich., where Biden administration officials met on Thursday with Arab American leaders.Credit...Nick Hagen for The New York Times

In a closed-door meeting with Arab American leaders in Michigan this week, one of President Biden’s top foreign policy aides acknowledged mistakes in the administration’s response to the war in Gaza, saying he did not have “any confidence” that Israel’s government was willing to take “meaningful steps” toward Palestinian statehood.

The remarks came after months of public and private admonitions from the Biden administration for Israel to take a more surgical approach in a conflict that has killed more than 27,000 Palestinians, according to health authorities in Gaza. On Thursday, Mr. Biden himself declared that Israel had gone “over the top” in its response to the Hamas attack on Oct. 7.

The Biden aide, Jon Finer, a deputy national security adviser, offered some of the administration’s clearest expressions of regret for what he called “missteps” it had made from the beginning of the violence, and he pledged that it would do better.

During the meeting on Thursday with Arab American political leaders in Dearborn, Mich., Mr. Finer said, “We are very well aware that we have missteps in the course of responding to this crisis since Oct. 7,” according to a recording of the gathering obtained by The New York Times. A National Security Council official confirmed the recording was authentic.

Mr. Finer added: “We have left a very damaging impression based on what has been a wholly inadequate public accounting for how much the president, the administration and the country values the lives of Palestinians. And that began, frankly, pretty early in the conflict.”

gaza02.jpg
Protesters in Dearborn on Thursday criticized the Biden administration’s continued funding of the Israeli military.Credit...Nick Hagen for The New York Times

The war in Gaza has become part of a cascade of political problems for Mr. Biden, who has remained publicly supportive of Israel and resisted demands within the Democratic Party to call for a cease-fire. His position since Hamas killed about 1,200 people in Israel on Oct. 7, along with his remarks casting doubt on the death toll from Israeli airstrikes and calling the loss of life “a price of waging war,” has angered young people, Black voters and progressives who are more sympathetic to the Palestinian cause.

Mr. Biden himself has acknowledged the pro-Palestinian protesters who have become a frequent presence at his public events. Last month, a campaign rally on abortion rights in Virginia was repeatedly interrupted by protesters urging Mr. Biden to call for a cease-fire.

After that rally, Mr. Biden met privately with about 40 invited attendees and urged them not to view demonstrators as political enemies, saying that they deserved sympathy and that their cause was “really important,” according to three people who attended the meeting.

A Biden campaign spokeswoman declined to comment.

But the recording of the Dearborn meeting provides an unusual behind-the-scenes glimpse at the administration’s attempts to shore up support in the critical battleground state of Michigan, which has a large Arab American population in Dearborn and other Detroit suburbs. Mr. Biden’s support in the state has eroded, polls show. His allies there have warned the White House in recent months that he runs the risk of losing the state, which he carried in 2020.

Mr. Finer and several other senior Biden administration officials, including Samantha Power, the administrator of the United States Agency for International Development, traveled to Dearborn on Thursday for a series of meetings, including the one in which Mr. Finer’s comments were recorded.

Those sessions came a week after Biden campaign aides, including Julie Chávez Rodríguez, the manager of his 2024 bid, quietly traveled to the city and met with a few officials, including Representative Rashida Tlaib, a Palestinian American progressive who is at the forefront of Democratic calls for a cease-fire.

However, Mayor Abdullah Hammoud of Dearborn and several other local officials declined to meet with Ms. Chávez Rodríguez. Mr. Hammoud later issued a statement saying he wished to speak with policymakers instead of campaign officials. White House officials then scrambled to arrange a visit.

During the Thursday meetings, Mr. Finer articulated the American government’s efforts to bring a halt to the war in Gaza. Building a formal diplomatic relationship between Israel and Saudi Arabia, he said, is a critical step toward creating a Palestinian state. Doing so, he added, requires politically difficult sacrifices from both countries and the United States.

gaza03.jpg
Jon Finer, at right in a purple tie, during a briefing on Ukraine in the Oval Office in October. He is the second-ranking official on the National Security Council. Credit...Brendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

“We will have to do things for Saudi Arabia that will be very unpopular in this country and in our Congress,” Mr. Finer said. “Will Israel be willing to do the hard thing that’s going to be required of them, which is meaningful steps for the Palestinians on the question of two states? I don’t know if the answer to that is yes. I do not have any confidence in this current government of Israel.”

Mr. Finer also said the Biden administration should have been faster to publicly condemn statements made by some Israeli officials that, in his words, compared “residents of Gaza to animals.” He said officials had not done so because they were trying to work with the Israeli government.

“Out of a desire to sort of focus on solving the problem and not engaging in a rhetorical back-and-forth with people who, in many cases, I think we all find somewhat abhorrent, we did not sufficiently indicate that we totally rejected and disagreed with those sorts of sentiments,” Mr. Finer said.

He did not clarify which Israeli officials he was referring to, but in the conflict’s early days, Yoav Gallant, the Israeli defense minister, said, “We are fighting human animals, and we are acting accordingly.” Some other Israeli officials have also faced criticism for dehumanizing language.

Mr. Finer’s most explicit note of contrition was for a statement released under Mr. Biden’s name on Jan. 14, marking 100 days since the conflict began. The statement focused on the plight of American and Israeli hostages being held in Gaza and made no reference to Palestinians who had been killed.

“It did not in any way address the loss of Palestinian life during the course of the first 100 days of the conflict,” Mr. Finer said. “There is no excuse for that. It should not have happened. I believe it will not happen again. But we know that there was a lot of damage done.”

Mr. Finer, who declined to comment, is the second-ranking official on the National Security Council, under Jake Sullivan, who is Mr. Biden’s national security adviser.

Adrienne Watson, a spokeswoman for the National Security Council, said: “The president and Mr. Finer were reflecting on concerns we have had for some time, and will continue to have as the Israeli operation proceeds, about the loss of Palestinian lives in this conflict and the need to reduce civilian harm.”

The Michiganders who attended the Thursday meetings with Biden administration officials described them as intense and said they were disappointed that the delegation from Washington had not committed to policy changes.

For example, administration officials declined to say whether they had advised or would advise the president to call for a cease-fire, which attendees asked for.

“You’re not going to get that answer,” said Steve Benjamin, the director of the White House’s public engagement office.

But the officials committed to issuing a letter clarifying the administration’s support of the work of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which the United States temporarily cut funding for after Israel accused some of its staff members of participating in the Oct. 7 attack. The Biden officials did not engage with questions from the Michigan leaders about the president’s electoral prospects in the state.

“We emphasized that beyond communication, there needs to be a change in policies,” said Abraham Aiyash, a Democratic state representative who is the majority leader in the Michigan House of Representatives. “We were clear that there would be no follow-up meetings in any capacity if there was not a shift in policy based on the tangible steps that we outlined for them today.”

Abbas Alawieh, a former congressional aide who attended the meeting, said it was “outrageous” that it had taken more than 100 days after the war started for the administration to engage with Dearborn, and that Mr. Biden had not visited himself.

gaza04.jpg
Abraham Aiyash, a Democratic state representative who is the majority leader in the Michigan Statehouse, has called for the Biden administration to change its policies toward Israel.Credit...Nick Hagen for The New York Times

Mr. Biden met with Arab and Muslim American leaders in October, amid growing tensions inside and outside the White House, and apologized for questioning the Gaza death toll and for other messaging from the administration. But he largely defended his support for Israel’s war, pointing to foreign policy considerations.

In November, administration officials also met by videoconference with Palestinian American leaders who expressed concern about surveys showing the plunging support for Mr. Biden in their communities. The officials told them that polling numbers did not dictate the president’s foreign policy decisions.

“People feel not just a vague sense of betrayal, but a bone-deep sense of betrayal by President Biden,” Mr. Alawieh said.

Assad I. Turfe, the deputy Wayne County executive, who also heard from the Biden aides on Thursday, said Mr. Biden should be judged by how soon the conflict in Gaza is resolved.

“The Biden administration must act swiftly and decisively to end this violence, honoring the principles of justice and human rights,” Mr. Turfe said.

On Tuesday, a group of Arab American and Muslim leaders in Michigan, led by Ms. Tlaib’s sister, announced a campaign to persuade Democrats angry about Mr. Biden’s stance on Israel to vote “Uncommitted,” against the president, in the state’s Democratic primary election on Feb. 27. Though such a move would most likely have little practical effect, it could embarrass the president if enough voters chose to participate.

Former Representative Andy Levin of Michigan called the campaign “a constructive thing for the president” and said he was encouraging fellow Democrats to vote Uncommitted — though he declined to say how he planned to vote in the primary.

“On Gaza, we’re going to have to keep pushing him,” Mr. Levin said in an interview.

Osama A. Siblani, the influential publisher of The Arab American News, a Dearborn newspaper, had meetings with both Ms. Chávez Rodríguez and Mr. Finer’s delegation. He said Arab American voters in Michigan felt betrayed after backing Mr. Biden in large numbers in 2020, arguing that they had “received nothing” since then “but lip service.”

“I’ve been involved in this community day in and day out every single day for 40 years,” Mr. Siblani said. “I can tell you right now, I cannot convince my community to vote for Biden if I kiss their feet. They will not do it.”
 
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