It began as one very conservative Southern Baptist City Council member questioning the religion of a Muslim appointee to the Jacksonville Human Rights Commission. But the appointment has turned into a referendum on Arab/Israeli peace and the possibility that Duval County Legislative Delegation may never get another bill through the Florida House of Representatives.
The conservative web site redcounty.com reported on April 13 that the appointment of Muslim UNF economics and finance professor Parvez Ahmed had been “stopped cold” by anti-Muslim groups such as Act Up! and the intervention of a “major state political figure.”
Red County was celebrating the 12-5 City Council vote on April 13 to send Ahmed’s nomination back to the Rules Committee.
Folio Weekly confirmed today that the major state political figure was House Majority Leader Rep. Adam Hasner (R-Delray Beach). According to councilmembers, Hasner contacted them before the meeting to discuss Ahmed.
He told District 1 City Councilmember Clay Yarborough — who’d previously quizzed other Human Rights Commission nominees about prayer in public buildings, gay marriage, and other irrelevant things, but then singled out Ahmed for questions on his religious affiliation — that his inquiries into Ahmed’s association with the Council on American-Islamic Relations were on target. “He said there may be some validity to the concerns coming in, in regard to CAIR,” Yarborough tells Folio Weekly. The councilmembers had received numerous emails from members of Jacksonville’s Act Up! chapter opposing Ahmed’s appointment.
After lobbying individual council members, Hasner apparently then let the Duval County Legislative Delegation know that he wanted the appointment voted down. Rep. Lake Ray (R-Jacksonville) called council members on Wednesday, April 21. He said the Duval Delegation would not have the support of House leadership on their legislation initiatives if the City Council approved Ahmed.
Also on Wednesday, City Council President Richard Clark received an email from the Florida regional director of the Anti-Defamation League calling Ahmed a Muslim radical who has “propagated anti-Israeli conspiracy theories” and “defended the terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah publicly.”
A Jacksonville citizen commission on tolerance and understanding normally wouldn’t captivate a House Majority Leader, but Hasner, who is Jewish, is something of a celebrated crusader against radical Muslim terrorism.
In Feb. 2009, he tried to prevent Muslims from lobbying state legislators. The Muslim group United Voices for America planned a Florida Muslim Capitol Day to concertedly lobby state legislators, The St. Petersburg Times reported, and Hasner tried to stop the event, saying that United Voices for America had ties to terrorist groups such as Hamas. He also sent emails to dozens of Jewish lobbyists asking if they planned to join an information campaign against the lobbying day.
Just two months later in April 2009, Hasner co-sponsored an event in South Florida that caused the Council on American-Islamic Relations to ask the GOP to demand Hasner resign from office. Ahmed was the chair of CAIR from 2005-2008.
The featured speaker at the “Florida Free Speech” conference told his audience: “Islam is not a religion. Islam is a totalitarian political ideologue. Islam’s heart lies at the Qu’an, and the Qur’an is a book that calls for hatred, that calls for violence, for murder, for terrorism, for war, and submission. The Qur’an calls upon Muslims to kill non-Muslims.”
Asked about CAIR’s demand he resign, Hasner told the St. Petersburg Times, “I am not going to allow the right to free speech to be stifled by a group like CAIR that has legally documented ties to the Muslim Brotherhood — a radical organization that is on record as stating they want to destroy America from within through the imposition of Sharia.”
Hasner also contacted Council President Richard Clark before the April 13 council meeting, but Clark said Hasner wasn’t lobbying against the appointment. Hasner just called to ask what the hullabaloo was about because he’d received so many calls.
Clark said he’s amazed that Ahmed’s appointment has become such a major issue. He said that UNF President John Delaney is beside himself with anger over the campaign against Ahmed. Clark points out most of the objections are about CAIR, an objection that he says may “have hair on it.” But he said the people opposing Ahmed don’t know him personally, like many people in Jacksonville do. He pointed out that Ahmed has lived in Jacksonville for many years and is known and respected widely.
When the City Council reconsiders whether to appoint Ahmed to the Human Rights Commission at the City Council meeting on April 27, Clark said will look at Ahmed’s community service in Jacksonville and make his judgement based upon people who know Ahmed and his history here.
— Susan Eastman