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America is full of contradictions. This is the story of one of them: the Arab-Americans who will vote for Donald Trump. 

He’s the man who says immigrants are “poisoning the blood of the country”, who calls them “terrorists”, and who wants a “Muslim ban”.

And yet, in a journey through Michigan, I’ve found they are swinging to him.

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It’s not just a story about the war in the Middle East. It goes beyond the desire to punish Biden and now Harris. It is about much more than the war.

In places like Dearborn or Hamtramck, it doesn’t take long to discover that a dynamic shift in views is taking place and that – as is so often the case – is about a perceived sense of abandonment but here with a particular twist.

A flag depicting the attempted assassination of Trump at a Michigan home
Image:
A flag depicting the attempted assassination of Trump at a Michigan home

My journey began at a local high school. Picture the place you’d imagine in the movies and that’s it.

Red brick outside, rows of lockers inside. The yellow buses, the Stars and Stripes and the pledge of allegiance.

It is the perfect reflection of America but with a diversity that defies the stereotypes, and views that may do too.

The Frontier International Academy is in the heart of Hamtramck, the only Muslim-majority city in America and the students reflect the demographic.

In between the “recess” game of American Football, the first-time voters and second-generation immigrants talk politics.

“We don’t know what she is going to provide, we don’t know what she is going to do. So I think it’s just a safer bet to go for Donald Trump,” 18-year-old Jubran Ali tells me.

Jubran Ali, 18, who thinks Trump is a 'safer bet' than Harris
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Jubran Ali, 18, who thinks Trump is a ‘safer bet’ than Harris

“I’m actually asking people around me to see what they’re voting, and most people are voting for Donald Trump,” Edris Alhady, also 18, says.

Michigan is one of the seven swing states in this country where the White House will be won or lost.

Shifts to the left or the right among small margins of voters will determine which way the country goes.

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In 2016, Trump was the first Republican to win Michigan since 1988. He beat Hillary Clinton by fewer than 11,000 votes.

Four years later, in 2020, Joe Biden won the state by only 154,188 votes out of more than 5.5 million cast – a 2.8% margin of victory.

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Michigan has the highest number of Arab-Americans in America. They represent a key voting bloc – one which the Democratic Party may have taken for granted.

Amer Ghalib is the mayor of Hamtramck. He is member of the Democratic Party and his office reflects his political roots- a photo of him with President Joe Biden sits prominently on his desk.

But something profound has happened since that snap was taken.

On Friday Mayor Ghalib welcomed Donald Trump to the city – a visit which came weeks after he endorsed the former president.

Mayor Amer Ghalib, a Democrat who has endorsed the former president
Image:
Mayor Amer Ghalib, a Democrat who has endorsed the former president

“Why Trump?” I asked.

“Well… it’s a combination of two things. Disappointment and hope. Disappointment that the current administration and how they are handling things locally or internationally, and hope that the new administration, led by Trump, will do something different.”

Our conversation was revealing in many ways. I’d come to this city expecting to hear anger about American policy in the Middle East. After all, the people here have deep existing ties to the region.

But only now was it obvious that the Arab-American shift right is also a consequence of the gradual leftward drift by the Democrats.

It’s about the real war in the Middle East, but it’s about culture wars too.

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Last year an attempt to fly a pride flag on city property was blocked by the mayor and his team.

“There is so much aggression and attempts to enforce certain values on the majority of this community,” Mayor Ghalib said, “…on schools, on public properties, city hall and the Democratic Party is not doing anything to prevent that shift in dynamics.”

I asked if anyone from Kamala Harris’s team had been in touch about his concerns before or since his endorsement of Trump.”No. No,” he said.

“Does that surprise you?”

“They think I’m a fake Democrat. All my life here I voted Democrat.”

Trump’s visit to the city is the culmination of groundwork by members of Team Trump for months, an indication of how important they see this state and this demographic.

So what about Trump’s pro-Israel stance? As he arrived in Detroit last week he praised Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

“Well, I don’t think there’s anything worse than what’s happening now,” the mayor said.

It’s a sentiment echoed here. The idea that no one can be worse than the Democrats on Israel-Gaza, and that domestically – on social issues and the economy – Trump would be better for this community.

Drive west out of Hamtramck through the Detroit suburbs and you reach Dearborn.

About half the population here is Arab-American, most from Lebanon. Over coffee with local environmental activist Samraa Luqman, a conversation that should alarm the Harris campaign.

Samraa Luqman, who voted for Clinton in 2016 and wrote in Sanders' name in 2020
Image:
Samraa Luqman, who voted for Clinton in 2016 and wrote in Sanders’s name in 2020

She tells me that she voted for Hillary Clinton in 2016, she wrote Bernie Sanders’s name onto the ballot in 2020. And this year?

“I’m voting for Trump,” Samraa says. “Why?” I ask.

“The genocide. Policy-wise, I don’t like any of the Republican policies, to be frank, at all… I will still vote for him because one thing I hate more than all those other policies is genocide… And that’s the sentiment of an entire community.”

I asked what made her think Trump would be any better for the Arab cause.

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“Trump is a wild card… will he do exactly what Kamala does or worse or better? But I know for sure what the Democrats are doing and they’re intending to continue it.”

This journey through communities that feel now forgotten and unheard ends for me where it started for them – at Detroit’s old Ford factory which drew so many Middle Eastern immigrants here generations ago.

There I met the local Yemeni-American Democratic Party caucus leader with a startling conclusion.

“I think the damage is great. I assure you that it’s not just about Michigan. This is a nationwide phenomena,” he said.

“I am very worried,” Abdulhakim Alsadeh said.

Abdulhakim Alsadeh
Image:
Abdulhakim Alsadeh

I ask him if he thinks the Democratic Party has messed up this campaign.

“Yes, I believe so. I really do,” he said. “The Republican nominee, former president Donald Trump, reached out to the Yemeni-American community. They sat with him. They talked with him.”

“Everybody is concerned,” he said.

It won’t take many to swing this state and streamline the path to the White House.

Here, through all the contradictions, many are swinging to Trump.

Freelance producer Ahmed Baider contributed to this report

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Gustav Klimt’s Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer sells for £180m at auction, a record for modern art

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Gustav Klimt's Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer sells for £180m at auction, a record for modern art

A painting that helped save the life of its Jewish subject during the Holocaust has become the most expensive piece of modern art and the second most expensive painting ever sold at auction.

The Portrait of Elisabeth Lederer, by Austrian artist Gustav Klimt, was bought for $236.4m (£180m) by an unnamed buyer after a 20-minute bidding war at Sotheby’s in New York on Tuesday.

Its sale price beat the previous record for 20th-century art set by Andy Warhol’s Shot Sage Blue Marilyn, a portrait of Marilyn Monroe bought for $195m (£148m) in 2022.

Shot Sage Blue Marilyn by Andy Warhol. Pic: Associated Press
Image:
Shot Sage Blue Marilyn by Andy Warhol. Pic: Associated Press

The most expensive painting ever sold at auction was Leonardo da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, which fetched $450m (£342m) in 2017, Christie’s said on its website.

Sotheby’s said on X the price for the Klimt was “astonishing”, making the piece “the most valuable work of modern art ever sold at auction”.

The portrait, which Klimt worked on between 1914 and 1916, depicts the daughter of one of Vienna’s wealthiest families wearing an East Asian emperor’s cloak.

Evaded fire and Nazi looters

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Measuring 1.8m (6ft), the colourful piece, which was completed in 1916, illustrates the Lederer family’s life of luxury before Nazi Germany annexed Austria in 1938.

It was kept separate from other Klimt paintings that burned in a fire at an Austrian castle.

It also escaped being looted by the Nazis, who plundered the Lederer art collection.

They left only the family portraits, which they held to be “too Jewish” to be worth stealing, according to the National Gallery of Canada, where the painting was previously on loan.

Father lie saved her life

To save her own life, Elisabeth Lederer made up a story that Klimt, who was not Jewish and died in 1918, was her father.

It helped that the artist spent years working meticulously on her portrait.

She convinced the Nazis to give her a document stating that she descended from Klimt, which allowed her to live safely in Vienna until her death from illness in 1944.

The painting, which is one of two full-length portraits by the Austrian artist that remain privately owned, was part of the collection of billionaire Leonard A Lauder, heir to the Estée Lauder cosmetics empire, who died this year.

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Five Klimt pieces from Lauder’s collection sold at the auction for a total of $392m (£298m), which also included pieces by Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse and Edvard Munch, Sotheby’s said.

An 18-carat-gold toilet by Maurizio Cattelan – the provocative Italian artist known for taping a banana to a wall – sold for a reported $12.1m (£9.2m).

The fully-functioning toilet, one of two he created in 2016 satirising superwealth, was stolen while on display at Blenheim Palace, the country manor where Winston Churchill was born, in 2019.

Two men were convicted of the theft, but it’s unclear what they did with the loo.

Investigators believe it was likely broken up and melted down.

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Man arrested in Florida over alleged murder and kidnap of British woman

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Man arrested in Florida over alleged murder and kidnap of British woman

A man has been arrested over the alleged murder of a missing British woman in Florida, investigators in the US have said.

The unnamed woman’s body was found in the town of Marion Oaks in central Florida last month.

Analysis of the remains confirmed her identity and that she had been murdered.

Dwain Hall, 53, of nearby Ocala, was arrested on charges of first-degree murder and kidnapping on Monday, the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) said in a statement.

The woman, who had been due to return home on 13 October, missed her scheduled flight, FDLE said.

Its officers had been asked to check on her by authorities in the UK, who approached them through the international investigative agency, Interpol.

Hall was held by FDLE agents and Marion County Sheriff’s Office detectives.

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FDLE commissioner Mark Glass said its agents “worked with extraordinary speed and unwavering determination to ensure justice was served and closure was brought to the victim’s family.

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“This type of violent crime and disregard for human life will not be tolerated in our state – those who commit such heinous crimes will be held fully accountable.”

Multiple agencies have helped in the investigation, including the FBI and the Hampshire & Isle of Wight Constabulary, FDLE said.

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Ship that hit Baltimore road bridge lost power before fatal collision due to a single loose wire

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Ship that hit Baltimore road bridge lost power before fatal collision due to a single loose wire

A single loose wire on the container ship that crashed into and partially destroyed a US road bridge, led to the vessel losing of power just before the fatal collision, investigators have concluded.

The US National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has found that the unconnected electric cable meant the Dali experienced a loss of propulsion and steering less than a mile from Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore.

The collision on 26 March 2024 that followed collapsed a span of the bridge and killed six construction workers who were unable to escape in time.

It led to the blockage of the mouth of one of America’s busiest ports for almost three months.

Investigators found that an improperly placed label on the wire prevented it from being fully inserted, causing an inadequate connection.

The NTSB’s chair said locating the loose wire was like trying to find a single loose rivet on the Eiffel Tower.

The board has praised the ship’s crew. “The crew’s actions were as timely as they could be, and they were appropriate and also impressive considering the circumstance,” board member Michael Graham said.

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But he called on the maritime shipping industry to strengthen its safety systems and better manage risks to bring it into line with the rigorous approach taken in aviation.

“Many of these issues we have discussed today as part of this accident could have been identified, addressed, and either mitigated or eliminated,” Mr Graham said.

The far reaching consequences of the accident are continuing. State officials have more than doubled the projected cost of the bridge rebuild from an upper estimate of $1.9bn (£1.4bn) to $5.2bn (£3.9bn) – with the reopening date pushed back to late 2030.

The Baltimore bridge collapse. Pic: Reuters
Image:
The Baltimore bridge collapse. Pic: Reuters

How to prevent future tragedies

In March, the board called for urgent safety assessments of 68 bridges in 19 US states including famous crossings like the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and New York’s Brooklyn Bridge.

The organisation found that countermeasures to reduce the vulnerability of the bridge from ships could have been implemented if a vulnerability assessment had been conducted by the Maryland Transportation Authority

The board has now issued numerous recommendations to try to prevent future catastrophic collisions.

Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore after its collapse in 2024
Image:
Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore after its collapse in 2024

Major bridges should consider adopting motorist warning systems that can immediately stop motorists from entering bridges in an emergency.

The Baltimore bridge, like many others, was not equipped with a warning system to prevent vehicles entering.

But police managed to clear and halt traffic on the bridge before the collapse, despite only having about 90 seconds to do so.

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Drone view of the Dali after it crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge. Pic: Reuters/NTSB
Image:
Drone view of the Dali after it crashed into the Francis Scott Key Bridge. Pic: Reuters/NTSB

If traffic had not been stopped, it is likely that the death toll would have been much higher.

Police officers were discussing how to best evacuate the six workers who were on the bridge moments before the entire structure collapsed.

Other recommendations include the periodic inspections of high-voltage switchboards and proposed changes that would allow ships to recover faster from a loss of power.

In a joint statement, Grace Ocean (the Dali’s manager) and Synergy Marine Group (the Dali’s operator) thanked the NTSB for its investigation and stressed that they had fully cooperated with the board.

It said: “Grace Ocean and Synergy Marine Group continue to extend their deepest sympathy to all those affected by the Francis Scott Key Bridge incident of 26 March 2024.

“Since the outset, Grace Ocean and Synergy Marine have fully cooperated with the Board, making personnel, records and technical information available as requested.

“We note the Board’s findings, including its observations regarding the vulnerability of the Key Bridge’s main support pier, as well as the comments relating to aspects of the vessel’s electrical arrangements. These matters will be reviewed in detail with our technical teams, the vessel owner and counsel.”

The NTSB also called on Hyundai Heavy – the company that built the Dali – to incorporate “proper wire-label banding installation methods”.

In response the company said that when it delivered the ship “there was no indication that any wire was loose”.

It added that if any wire were to come loose “over the course of a decade, through vibrations or otherwise, the owner and operator should have detected that in a routine inspection and through normal maintenance”.

Synergy Marine Group has been approached for a response to Hyundai Heavy’s comments.

The NTSB has not specified that the power outage caused the crash. A probable cause for the crash will be decided at a later date.

The FBI is conducting a criminal probe into the collapse.

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