UPDATED 2:37 P.M.
HARPER WOODS, Michigan (Reuters) -U.S. President Joe Biden arrived in Michigan on Thursday to visit union autoworkers crucial to his reelection bid, as the state’s Arab-American community plans protests over his handling of the war in Gaza.
Biden’s travel to the election battleground state was intended as a celebration after the United Auto Workers (UAW) union recently endorsed his reelection bid. But his trip may be overshadowed by opposition from Michigan’s large Arab-American and Muslim population, which is upset the president has not called for a ceasefire in the Israel-Gaza conflict.
Shortly after arriving in the state, Biden stopped at They Say restaurant in Harper Woods, Michigan, to work the lunch crowd, shaking hands, chatting with customers and posing for photos.
The Biden reelection campaign said he was meeting with Black faith leaders there.
The campaign worked to keep details of the president’s visit private in the face of expected opposition. Across the Detroit area, hundreds of protesters were standing by in cars and vans armed with blue and white “Abandon Biden” signs and Palestinian flags to rush to whichever UAW local Biden will visit.
“We’re ready to go. I have my megaphone in the car,” said Farah Khan, a Pakistani-American who voted for Biden in 2020 but now supports the Abandon Biden campaign in Michigan, told Reuters. “We have 92 Abandon Biden chapters across the country. This is bigger than just Michigan.”
Before heading to Michigan, Biden attended the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington. He said he was working to resolve the Israel-Hamas conflict, including a two-state solution for Palestinians and bringing home the hostages still held following Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack on southern Israel.
“We are actively working for peace,” he said at the breakfast.
UNION BACKING
In the Detroit area, Biden will meet with UAW President Shawn Fain, who last week gave a full-throated endorsement of the Democratic incumbent and a sharp rebuke of Republican frontrunner Donald Trump.
Trump blasted Fain afterward, and on Wednesday met with the Teamsters, one of America’s biggest unions representing truck drivers, airline pilots and others, as he competes for their backing ahead of the Nov. 5 presidential election.
The auto industry and its labor movement are deeply intertwined with politics and elections in Michigan.
In 2016, Trump earned a level of support from union members that no Republican had reached since Ronald Reagan in 1980, helping him narrowly capture the critical states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Biden rebounded with unions in 2020, with a roughly 16-percentage point advantage as he reclaimed those so-called Rust Belt states, which have been scarred by decades of job losses as companies embraced lower-cost, often non-union locations. He won Michigan in 2020 by some 154,000 votes.
Arab Americans account for 5% of the vote in Michigan and Biden’s margin of victory over Trump was less than 3 percentage points in 2020. An October poll showed Biden’s support among Arab Americans had plunged to 17% from 59% in 2020.
However, Biden’s campaign believes that his support from union workers could overcome any drop in support from the Arab-American community. A Biden campaign official said the UAW’s endorsement will mean more in November in Michigan than the anger among Muslim voters in the state.
(Reporting by Nandita Bose and Steve Holland in Washington and Andrea Shalal in Michigan; Editing by Heather Timmons, Paul Thomasch, Susan Heavey and Jonathan Oatis)
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WASHINGTON/MICHIGAN (Reuters) – U.S. President Joe Biden will visit autoworkers in Michigan on Thursday, where he is likely to face protests over his handling of the war in Gaza, after several leaders of the state’s Arab-American community declined to meet his campaign team last week.
Biden’s travel to the battleground state was intended as a celebration after the United Auto Workers Union recently endorsed his re-election bid. But his trip may be overshadowed by opposition from the state’s Arab American and Muslim population, which is upset the president has not called for a ceasefire in the Israel-Gaza conflict.
The Biden campaign has kept details of the president’s visit private in the face of expected protests.
Biden is expected to attend the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington on Thursday before heading to Michigan. He will meet with United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, who has offered a full throated endorsement of the Democratic incumbent while heaping criticism on Republican frontrunner Donald Trump.
The auto industry and its labor movement are deeply intertwined with politics and elections in Michigan. In 2016, Trump earned a level of support from union members that no Republican had reached since Ronald Reagan, helping him narrowly capture critical states such as Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Biden rebounded with unions in 2020, with a roughly 16-percentage-point advantage as he reclaimed those so-called Rust Belt states, which have been scarred by decades of job losses as companies embraced lower-cost, often nonunion locations. He won Michigan in 2020 by some 154,000 votes.
Arab Americans account for 5% of the vote in Michigan and Biden’s margin of victory over Trump was less than 3% in 2020. An October poll showed Biden’s support among Arab Americans had plunged to 17% from 59% in 2020.
However, the Biden campaign believes that his support from union workers could overcome any drop in support from the Arab-American community. A Biden campaign official said this endorsement will mean more in November in Michigan than the anger among Muslim voters in the state.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer warned on Face the Nation on Sunday that Biden could face demonstrators during his trip. Multiple pro-Palestinian groups and individuals, including Muslim Americans, Jewish Americans and anti-war organizations have pledged to protest his visit.
More than 100 people participated on Wednesday in a rally at a local high school in Dearborn, many wearing traditional Palestinian scarves known as keffiyehs and holding signs that said “Abandon Biden.”
(Reporting by Nandita Bose in Washington and Andrea Shalal in Michigan; Editing by Heather Timmons, Paul Thomasch and Michael Perry)




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