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How many Muslims won Political office
#1
Quote:How Many Muslims Won Political Office
The Numbers May Surprise You!..................WAKE-UP AMERICA!! 
 Federal
Rashida Tlaib (D)
MI 13th Congressional District
 
Keith Ellison (D)
MN Attorney General
 
Ilhan Omar (D)
MN 5th Congressional District
 
Andre Carson (D)
IN  7th Congressional District
 
 
 
 
 
State
Sheikh Rahman (D)
GA State Senate District 5
 
Safiya Wazir (D)
NH State House Merrimack 17 District
 
Robert Jackson (D)
NY State Senate District 31
 
Nasif Majeed (D)
NC State House District 99
 
Mujtaba Mohammed (D)
NC State Senate District 38
 
Mohamud Noor (D)
MN State House District 60B
 
Jason Dawkins (D)
PA State House District 179
 
Hodan Hassan (D)
MN State House District 62A
 
Charles Fall (D)
NY State House District 61
 
Ako Abdul-Samad (D)
IA State House District 35
 
Aboul Khan ®
NH State House Rockingham 20 District
 
Abdullah Hammoud (D)
MI State House District 15
 
Abbas Akhil (D)
NM State House District 20
 
County
Sam Baydoun (D)
MI Wayne County Commission District 13
 
Sadia Gul Covert (D)
IL Dupage County Board District 5
 
Sabina Taj
MD Howard County Board of Education
 
Mohammad Ramadan
NJ Passaic County Board of Education
 
Cheryl Sudduth
CA West County Wastewater District Director
 
Babur Lateef
VA Prince William County School Board
 
Assad Akhter (D)
NJ Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders
 
Abdul “Al” Haidous (D)
MI Wayne County Commission District 11
 
 
 
 
Municipal
 
 
Judiciary
Shahabuddeen Ally
NYC Civil Court, NY County
 
Sam Salamey
MI District Courts, District 19
 
Rabeea Collier
TX District Courts, 113th District
 
Halim Dhanidina
CA Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Three
 
George Abdallah Jr.
CA Superior Court of San Joaquin County, Office 12
 
Adel A. Harb
--------------------------- --
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
In breaking these down by state

 

California
Cheryl Sudduth – West County Wastewater District Director
George Abdallah Jr. – Superior Court of San Joaquin County, Office 12
Halim Dhanidina – Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Three
Maimona Afzal Berta – Franklin-McKinley Board of Education
Javed Ellahie – Monte Sereno City Council
Al Jabbar – Anaheim Union High School District Board of Trustees
Ahmad Zahra – Fullerton City Council District 5
Aisha Wahab – Hayward City Council
Ali Taj – Artesia City Council
Farrah Khan – Irvine City Council
Sabina Zafar – San Ramon City Council
 
Florida
Amira Dajani Fox ® – State Attorney
 
Georgia
Sheikh Rahman (D) – State Senate District 5
 
Illinois
Sadia Gul Covert (D) – Dupage County Board District 5
 
Indiana
Andre Carson (D) – 7th Congressional District
 
Iowa
Ako Abdul-Samad (D) – State House District 35
 
Maryland
Sabina Taj – Howard County Board of Education
 
Michigan
Rashida Tlaib (D) – 13th Congressional District
Abdullah Hammoud (D) – State House District 15
Abdul “Al” Haidous (D) – Wayne County Commission District 11
Sam Baydoun (D) – Wayne County Commission District 13
Adel A. Harb – Wayne County Circuit Court
Sam Salamey – District Courts, District 19
 
Minnesota
Ilhan Omar (D) – 5th Congressional District
Keith Ellison (D) – Attorney General
Hodan Hassan (D) – State House District 62A
Mohamud Noor (D) – State House District 60B
Siad Ali (D) – District 3 member of the Minneapolis Board of Education
 
New Hampshire
Aboul Khan ® – State House Rockingham 20 District
Safiya Wazir (D) – State House Merrimack 17 District
 
New Jersey
Assad Akhter (D) – Passaic County Board of Chosen Freeholders
Alaa “Al” Abdel-Aziz – Paterson City Council Ward 6
Mohammad Ramadan – Passaic County Board of Education
Alaa Matari – Prospect Park Borough Council
Dawn Haynes – Newark Public Schools School Board
Hazim Yassin – Red Bank City Council
Mohamed Khairullah – Prospect Park Mayor
Salim Patel – Passaic City Council
 
New Mexico
Abbas Akhil (D) – State House District 20
 
New York
Charles Fall (D) – State House District 61
Robert Jackson (D) – State Senate District 3
Shahabuddeen Ally – NYC Civil Court, NY County
 
North Carolina
Mujtaba Mohammed (D) – State Senate District 38
Nasif Majeed (D) – State House District 99
 
Ohio
Mohamed Al-Hamdani – Dayton Public Schools Board of Education
 
Pennsylvania
Jason Dawkins (D) – State House District 179
 
Texas
Rabeea Collier – District Courts, 113th District
Salman Bhojani – Euless City Council Place 6
 
Virginia
Babur Lateef – Prince William County School Board
Haseeb Javed – Manassas Park City Council
Mo Seifeldein – Alexandria City Council
Those judiciary wins are extremely significant considering how judges don’t seem to be concerned about the Constitution anymore and look to foreign law and “precedent” in many of their rulings.
However, numbers from a report by Hamas-CAIR (Council on American-Islamic Relations) in coordination with JETPAC indicates that a high percentage of Muslims voted in 2018.
 
The report claims:
97% of Muslim voters participated in this year’s midterm election.
• 88% of Muslim voters primarily voted for the Democratic Party candidates and 17% for Republican Party candidates.
• 56% of Muslim voters consider themselves liberal on social issues, while 26% consider themselves conservative.
• 33% of Muslim voters consider themselves fiscally conservative, while 50% consider themselves liberal.
• 26% of Muslim voters who primarily voted for Democratic candidates perceived themselves as being conservative on social issues. Moreover, 36% perceived themselves as being fiscally conservative.
• 78% of Muslim voters thought Islamophobia and anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. increased while 17% thought it decreased in the past year.
• 88% of Muslim voters who primarily voted for Democratic Party candidates thought Islamophobia increased in the past year. Conversely, only 33% of Muslim voters who primarily voted for Republican Party candidates thought Islamophobia increased in the past year.
• 53% of Muslim voters became more interested in politics since the 2016 presidential election, while 34% maintained the same level of interest in politics and 13% became less interested in politics.
• 65% of Muslim voters have become more actively involved in politics and/or civically engaged since the 2016 presidential election, while 25% have not.
• Out of those Muslim voters who have become more actively involved in politics and/or civically engaged since 2016 presidential election:
• 50% have primarily donated money to a political or social campaign.
• 55% have primarily donated their time by volunteering with a local charity or civic-minded or religious organization.
• 48% have primarily donated their expertise by using their skills and/or network to advance social/political engagement.
• 27% have primarily been involved in another way.

 
If you don’t think they have an agenda to conform America to Islam, you really do need to pull your head out of the sand.
Article posted with permission from The Washington Standard
#2
What people need to start to understand is that islam hates democracy. When a muslim votes they are voting for the person they are told to vote for by the imams. There is always a massive % of muslims that vote for chosen muslims to get them into power, not to vote and not to vote for the chosen is not to do the will of God. 
They also have systems in place to check who the muslims vote for.
We need to wake up to the fact that islam does not play to our rules. and is using democracy to defeat democracy


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