GOP Guv Hopeful Panned For Peddling Muslim Conspiracies On MI Senate Floor

Michigan Senate (via Wikimedia Commons)
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LANSING, Mich. (AP) — A Republican gubernatorial candidate was rebuked by colleagues Thursday for peddling “conspiracy theories” about Muslims on the floor of the Michigan Senate.

State Sen. Patrick Colbeck in a Thursday speech defended unsubstantiated claims of the Muslim Brotherhood installing “civilization jihad” in the U.S. The comments came two days after Buzzfeed News reported he made similar statements in a private meeting this month.

Democrats swiftly panned Colbeck’s remarks. Senate Minority Leader Jim Ananich said the message continues “to prove that he’s an ass,” while Sen. David Knezek termed Colbeck’s behavior as “a cheap rip-off of Joseph McCarthy.”

“I hope you’re looking at me, senator, as I call you a coward,” said Knezek, a Democrat from Dearborn Heights. “These comments are nothing more than that of a bully.”

On the Senate floor, Colbeck also alluded back to unfounded claims that Abdul El-Sayed, a Democratic candidate for governor and Muslim-American doctor, has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood. He argued that the organization has support from the Muslim Student Association, which El-Sayed participated in while attending the University of Michigan.

The Muslim Student Association is a network of college students at campuses nationwide who meet to celebrate Islamic culture.

Michigan’s Republican Party distanced itself from Colbeck’s “conspiracy theories” in a statement by spokeswoman Sarah Anderson, but GOP politicians vying to replace Gov. Rick Snyder are largely sidestepping the controversy.

Republican front-runner Bill Schuette, Michigan’s attorney general, believes “all people must be treated with dignity and respect,” spokesman John Sellek said.

Schuette’s rival, Lt. Gov. Brian Calley, did not respond to a request for comment, while the fourth candidate, Dr. Jim Hines from Saginaw, said Colbeck should understand his constitutional pledge to not discriminate based on faith. Republican leadership in both chambers declined to comment.

Polls have shown Colbeck in the single digits.

Democratic Rep. Abdullah Hammoud of Dearborn, one of the nation’s biggest Arab communities, said Colbeck should resign immediately for remarks that “reek of desperation and echo the sounds of a political career coming to its rightful end.”

Republican political consultant Dennis Darnoi said he doesn’t believe Colbeck’s sentiments will have much sway on Michigan’s GOP base this year. Colbeck’s speech was a “self-serving” stunt, he said.

“He will do and say anything he possibly can to make sure his gubernatorial candidacy has wings,” Darnoi said. “It’s a pathetic attempt to try to draw attention to himself and has no place in the Republican Party, period.”

The controversy surrounding Colbeck comes ahead of President Donald Trump’s visit to Macomb County on Saturday. Schuette, a Trump ally, is expected to attend the rally.

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Notable Replies

  1. remarks that … echo the sounds of a political career coming to its rightful end.

    Love that. Beautifully stated. I hope, come November, it’s an echo heard round the country.

  2. Avatar for pb pb says:

    Why is it that Americans, and it seems Republicans in particular, need a boogeyman? A generation ago it was commies, today it’s Muslims. (To a certain extent, it’s still commies. See, e.g., Don Blankenship’s recent comments about the communist NYT. Repubs may lurve Russia nowadays, but they also still freely invoke the spectre of communism whenever they need to whip up the passions of the rubes.)

  3. Abdul El-Sayed is a good guy, and Colbeck is a yammering jackass. Neither has any real chance of being elected governor in Michigan.

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