December 13, 2007
Muslims the New Swing Voters? Stay Tuned.
Alienated, uneasy, politically
up for grabs. Fueled by
immigration, they are among the
fastest growing voting blocs in the U.S.
Hispanics?
No:
Muslims.
How many
Muslims live in the U.S.? A definitive tally doesn’t
exist in part because the U.S. Census Bureau is
prohibited from
asking about religious affiliation. (Why?) But
estimates range from 2 to 7 million.
If that seems like a wide range—it
is. It reflects the
conflicting political orientations of the groups
making the estimates.
At the low end, 1.9 million, is the
"best estimate" of a National Opinion Research
Center study commissioned by the American Jewish
Congress shortly after 9/11.
Muslim groups jumped on the AJC figure as an attempt
to "marginalize" Islam in the U.S. [Number
of U.S. Muslims Depends on Who's Counting
By Bill Broadway, Washington Post,
, November 24, 2001]
At the high end a study
co-sponsored by the
Council on American-Islamic Relations, and released
in April 2001, estimated that 7 million Muslims were
living in the U.S.
CAIR’s methodology was simple. Its researchers
simply called
the country’s 1,209 known mosques, asked their
leaders to
estimate the number of people involved in any way with
the mosque, and multiplied the two figures. The
resulting product—2 million—was then multiplied by a
factor of 3.5 to capture "un-mosqued" Muslims.
Predictably, the AJC saw this as an
attempt to inflate Muslim population estimates
beyond the
Jewish population figure, usually put at 6 million
in the U.S.
But while the numbers may be in
dispute, the trend is clear. Muslims are a rapidly
growing slice of the U.S. population—and immigration is
the major source of that growth. Compare the growth of
Middle Eastern and
Asian immigrants with those from the rest of the
world over the 1970 to 2000 period:
[Table 1]
As a share of the foreign-born
population, Middle Easterners rose from 2 percent in
1970 to 5 percent in 2000. This does not include their
U.S.-born citizen children, estimated at nearly
600,000 in 2000.
Of course
not all Middle Eastern immigrants are Muslim. Back
in 1970, about 85 percent were either
Christians from Lebanon or
other non-Muslims fleeing
persecution in Muslim countries.
By 2000, however, nearly
three-quarters the estimated 1.5 million
immigrants born in the Middle East were Muslim.
Obvious implication: the number of
Middle Eastern Muslims living in the U.S. has grown even
faster than the overall immigrant population from that
area would suggest.
You would
think the rising tide of Muslim immigration
would have ebbed after 9/11. It did—briefly. But
after hitting bottom in 2003, this immigration soared.
In 2006 immigrants from primarily Muslim countries—a
group that includes
South Asians as well as
Middle Easterners—represented a larger share of
legal permanent residents admitted to the U.S. than in
2000.
The trend is seen in the number of
people obtaining permanent resident status (Green
Cards):
[Table 2]

The number of Green Cards
obtained by people born in Muslim countries was 74
percent higher in 2006 than in 2000. Over the same
period Mexicans stayed basically the same. The total
number of Green Cards awarded rose by 51 percent.
Black Muslims, nearly all of whom are U.S.-born,
account for about 30 percent of the country’s
Muslims. That translates to about 2.1 million African
American Muslims, or nearly 6 percent of all blacks in
the U.S.
Black Muslims are reportedly
increasing
both in numbers and extremism:
"….As
African-Americans embrace Islam in growing numbers, many
are moving toward a more orthodox version influenced, in
part, by Saudi Arabia’s puritanical brand of Sunni
Islam. These foreign ideas have combined with homegrown
black experience to form a mindset that condemns alcohol
and drugs and hails self-sufficiency—but one that
sometimes also stresses an unsettling hostility to
American government and secular society."
One Imam Traces Path Of Islam In Black America,
The Wall Street Journal, By Paul M. Barrett October
24, 2003
A
Muslim majority?
Sharia the law of the land? Even the most wacko
Islamist probably doesn’t see that happening soon
But Muslim immigration, combined
with Muslim proselytizing, could change things quickly.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.