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ArticlesApril 08, 2026
Muslim senate candidate says response to Islamic terror attack in Michigan that, quote, “hurt people do hurt people"
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Michigan Democrat Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed on the Hezbollah inspired terrorist attack on Temple Israel:
“I think it’s just critical for us to understand that hurt people do hurt people...” pic.twitter.com/94vp86x9Jl
— RNC Research (@RNCResearch) April 8, 2026
When speaking about the man who drove a vehicle with explosives into a Michigan synagogue on Thursday, Michigan Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed said that “hurt people do hurt people.” It is unclear how he thinks this will satisfy both sides, but he has deeply missed the mark with this one.
According to CNN:
The Israeli military said the brother of the man who drove a vehicle laden with explosives into a Michigan synagogue Thursday was a Hezbollah commander killed in a strike last week.
Why is this so hard for him to fully condemn? That tells you everything you need to know.
In a statement Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces said the assailant’s brother, Ibrahim Muhammad Ghazali, was in charge of managing weapons operations in the Iranian proxy group’s Badr unit.
IDF Arabic language spokesman Avichay Adraee said Ibrahim Ghazali was killed March 5 when the IDF struck a Hezbollah military building used to store weapons.
It is no surprise that El-Sayed is having trouble condemning this. This is the same candidate who refused to make a public statement on the assassination of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei because he believed “a lot of people in Dearborn are sad” about the death.
"I also want to remind you guys that there are a lot of people in Dearborn who are sad today. So, like, I just don't want to comment on Khamenei at all. Like, I don't think it's worth even touching that," El-Sayed told his campaign team.
"We have the moral high ground here," the candidate said, adding that reporters would "try and bait us into saying, 'Yeah, but isn't it justified now that they took [Khamenei] out, right? And I just think, for us, we've got to be, like, 'no.'"
He also appears to think it is not worth it to touch on the Hezbollah-inspired attack on Temple Israel. Ironic, isn't it? The fact that he thinks it was morally superior to stay silent on the issue tells you all you need to know.
That being said, there are a lot of “hurt” people in the world who don’t “hurt people.” He should really think about that the next time he walks around instead of clearly condemning a blatant act of terrorism.
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