February 28, 2024 - 7:30am

Last night in Michigan, President Joe Biden hit a bump on the road to his nomination for a second term. The presidential motorcade will keep rolling, but it is a sign that not all is well in the Democratic coalition.

In the weeks leading up to Michigan’s primary, progressives, Arab-American leaders, and other Michiganders in support of a ceasefire in the Gaza War joined together to call for a vote for uncommitted delegates to the Democratic National Convention in August, rather than delegates committed to vote for Biden, whom they view as too favourable to Israel.

Michigan Congresswoman and “Squad” member Rashida Tlaib was at the forefront of the effort. “I was proud today to walk in and pull a Democratic ballot and vote uncommitted,” she said in a video posted to X. “When 74 percent of Democrats in Michigan support a ceasefire, yet President Biden is not hearing us, this is the way we can use our democracy to say ‘listen to Michigan.’” As I write, the total uncommitted vote stands at 14 percent and is likely to rise when Detroit and its suburbs are fully counted, dramatically exceeding the 20,000 uncommitted votes from the 2012 Michigan primary.

Michigan is probably the top state for this kind of protest vote because of its large Arab-American population. If they can’t come close to beating Biden here, they won’t beat him anywhere. And for that reason, it’s likely that Biden and his people will simply ignore the protest. They may do some pro forma outreach, and if a ceasefire happens, they will take full credit for it. Beyond that, though, the president’s brain trust will likely gamble that no one who thinks Biden is too pro-Israel is going to turn around and vote for Donald Trump in November — one of the most pro-Israel presidents we’ve ever had. 

In this, they are mostly correct. The only problem is Michigan is a fiendishly competitive battleground state (Trump won it by 11,000 votes in 2016) and it is expected to be just as close this year. Biden must therefore be careful: he can’t afford an enthusiasm gap at a time when Trump’s popularity is rising. And he can’t afford the impression — increasingly common among young progressives — that he is no different than Trump on the question of Israel and Palestine.

Most of the far-Left dissenters will line up behind their party’s nominee in November. That is what a party’s base does, if not because they love him, then because they hate Donald Trump more. But any hint of apathy could have amplified effects in states like Michigan.

Biden’s renomination is not being derailed, but last night’s result shows that his coalition is looking a lot shakier than yesterday.


Kyle Sammin is the senior editor of the Philadelphia Weekly and the co-host of the Conservative Minds podcast. Follow him on Twitter at @KyleSammin.