Census Bureau abruptly ends just-announced partnership with Muslim advocacy group CAIR
EXCLUSIVE: The
Commerce Department on Thursday terminated its just-announced planned
partnership with the nation's largest Muslim advocacy group, the Council on American-Islamic Relations,
after Fox News' "Tucker Carlson Tonight" asked about the arrangement --
given CAIR's reported ties to the terrorist group Hamas, and its
repeated attacks on the president.
"Based on further review, the Census Bureau is no longer partnering with CAIR," the Commerce Department said in a statement to "Tucker."
The
plan, according to the group, was to enhance outreach efforts to
Muslims using CAIR's network of local offices. The census, conducted
once a decade, has been used not only to determine congressional
apportionment, but also as a critical planning tool for state, local and
federal agencies.
However, CAIR and the Trump administration
would have been strange bedfellows -- and tension in the relationship
was evident earlier Thursday. Reached by Fox News prior to the Census
Bureau's decision, CAIR openly derided the Trump administration as
"white supremacist" despite the partnership.
"The Census Bureau,
like CAIR, is nonpartisan," the organization said. "CAIR is not
receiving any government funding as part of this project to promote
Muslim participation in the U.S. census. We continue to believe that
President Trump and his administration promote a white supremacist,
anti-immigrant and Islamophobic agenda."
In its official statement on Wednesday announcing the partnership, however, CAIR sounded a more positive note.
"CAIR
is proud to partner with the U.S. Census Bureau to ensure American
Muslims are fairly and accurately counted in the 2020 Census," Nihad
Awad, CAIR’s national executive director, said in a news release earlier on Thursday. "Full
participation in the census ensures that American Muslims will be
better represented in Congress and that their communities receive an
equal share in state and federal programs."
The organization
added: "CAIR wants to ensure that not only are American Muslim
communities being fairly counted, but that their neighbors are getting a
fair share in federal and state funding."
In 2009, the FBI severed its once-close ties to CAIR amid mounting evidence that the group had links to a support network for Hamas.
Local
chapters of CAIR were shunned in the wake of a 15-year FBI
investigation that culminated in the conviction of Hamas fundraisers at a
trial in which CAIR itself was listed as an unindicted co-conspirator.
The U.S. government has designated Hamas as a terrorist organization.
Roula Allouch, the board chairwoman of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, left, seen speaking in 2016.
(AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
The FBI
previously had invited CAIR to give training sessions for agents and
used it as a liaison with the American Muslim community.
CAIR's executive director, Nihad Awad, attended a post-Sept. 11 meeting with then-FBI Director Robert Mueller, and he met with other top brass as
recently as 2006. That was before Awad was shown to have participated
in planning meetings with the Holy Land Foundation, five officials of
which were convicted in December of funneling $12.4 million to Hamas.
Prosecutors
identified CAIR's chairman emeritus, Omar Ahmad, as an unindicted
co-conspirator in that trial, and Special Agent Lara Burns testified
that CAIR was a front group for radical organizations operating in the
U.S.
CAIR denied it conspired in the case and has sued
unsuccessfully to have its name removed from the list of
co-conspirators. It also has protested the FBI's decision to sever
relations.
"This is an unfortunate legacy of the Bush
administration's misguided and counterproductive efforts to marginalize
mainstream American Muslim organizations," CAIR's national office said
in a statement to Fox News at the time. "It is not surprising that we
would be singled out by those in the previous administration who sought
to prevent us from defending the civil rights of American Muslims."
In a statement on its website in May 2013, CAIR similarly rejected suggestions it had links to terrorism.
"CAIR
is not is [sic] 'the Wahhabi lobby,' a 'front group for Hamas,' a
'fundraising arm for Hezbollah,' '...part of a wider conspiracy overseen
by the Muslim Brotherhood...' or any of the other false and misleading
associations our detractors seek to smear us with," the organization
said. "That we stand accused of being both a 'fundraising arm of
Hezbollah' and the 'Wahhabi lobby' is a significant point in
demonstrating that our detractors are hurling slander, not fact.
Hezbollah and the Salafi (Wahhabi) movement represent diametrically
opposed ideologies." "Tucker Carlson Tonight" investigative producer Alex Pfeiffer contributed to this report.
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