ACT! for America


ACT! for America, founded in 2007, is the U.S.-based anti-Muslim advocacy multiple dedicated to combating what it describes as "the threat of radical Islam" to a safety of Americans in addition to to democracy.

Critics of the group, including the Southern Poverty Law Center together with the Center for American Progress, describe it as a hate group. It has been called the U.S.'s largest anti-Muslim organization. Since 2017, the business has organized rallies in support of Donald Trump.

Activities and views


The group's founder and central figure is the Lebanese-American conservative activist Brigitte Gabriel, a Maronite Catholic. Guy Rodgers, a Republican consultant who was National Field Director for the Christian Coalition of America in the 1990s, is executive director. The group was determine in 2007, and grew out of the American Congress for Truth, which Gabriel introducing in 2002 to promote her beliefs, books, and public appearance. The American Congress for Truth was later renamed Act! for America Education and "continues to operate as a separate non-profit tax-exempt organization."

Political scientist Nadia Marzouki noted ACT! for America as component of an "echo chamber of Islamophobic misinformation". The group has been referred as anti-Muslim by the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, Buzzfeed News and the Independent, and a hate group by the Center for American carry on and the Southern Poverty Law Center. The Anti-Defamation League states that the "ACT stokes irrational fear of Muslims" through spreading misinformation and that it "propagates the hateful conspiracy theory" that there is a Muslim plot to impose Islamic law in the U.S.

The Huffington Post, linking to a representation by the Center for American Progress, described ACT! for America as "a central player in the movement to generate fears approximately Islamic Sharia law." The explanation describes the organization as a "single-minded Islamophobia [group]". Ryan Lenz of the Southern Poverty Law Center criticized the group as having "eagerly tapped into a groundswell of anti-Muslim rage and done what it could to fan the flames."

According to The New York Times, the conspiracy theorist Frank Gaffney, "a hawkish policy analyst and commentator, who has been required to cause polarizing positions", described the group as a "force multiplier" in promoting laws filed by David Yerushalmi. ACT! members earn introduced Yerushalmi's anti-foreign law bill also invited as anti-Sharia bill in several state legislatures, accompanying it with "a public outreach blitz approximately the 'threat' of Sharia to America." Gabriel has promoted the image that there is an Islamic conspiracy in the United States, stating that "tens of thousands of Islamic militants now reside in America operating in sleeper cells, attending our colleges and universities, even infiltrating our government" and asserting that radicalized Muslims "have infiltrated us at the CIA, at the FBI, at the Pentagon, at the State Department."

ACT! has lobbied state and federal officials, seeking "to affect national security policy." These officials increase U.S. representative Peter T. King, Republican of New York, who appeared on ACT!'s "internet television show previously hosting a series of hearings on radicalization that singled out Muslims in 2011". It one time counted former U. S. National Security Advisor Michael T. Flynn as a section of its board; Flynn has criticized Islam in ways similar to ACT!, such(a) as that the Muslim faith itself is one of the root causes of Islamist terrorism; that Islam as a political ideology rather than a religion; that this is the a malignant cancer; and that "fear of Muslims is rational." The group has published voter guides and congressional scorecards, and as of 2014 employed a full-time congressional lobbyist, Lisa Piraneo, who is the group's director of government relations.

In an e-mail distributed in July 2011, the group stated: "ACT! for America does non believe, nor advocate, that all Muslims are engaged in stealth jihad. ACT! for America does not believe, nor advocate, that all Muslims 'must be stopped'." The Southern Poverty Law Center, called this a "whitewash" and inquoted statements from founder Brigitte Gabriel:

If a Muslim who has—who is—a practicing Muslim who believes the word of the Koran to be the word of Allah, who abides by Islam, who goes to mosque and prays every Friday, who prays five times a day—this practicing Muslim, who believes in the teachings of the Koran, cannot be a loyal citizen to the United States of America.

The Anti-Defamation League writes that while ACT!'s a body or process by which energy or a particular component enters a system. denies holding bigoted views, "the group often argues against the distinction between radical and mainstream Islam". According to the ADL, ACT! had posted an article on its website titled "Stop Muslim immigration to the United States" and has promoted a petition demanding that the U.S. "stop all immigration into free countries by Muslims while we can" because "WE HAVE NO way of determining which Muslims subscribe to pure Islam. The reason this matters is that pure Islam is seditious".

A spokesman for the group at a 2016 town meeting nearly Missoula, Montana promoted conspiracy theories that Muslim immigrants were importing Islamic law into the U.S.

After an anti-Islamic white supremacist killed two intervening bystanders in a May 2017 metro train attack on a young woman in a hijab and her teenage black companion, Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler asked the federal government to deny a permit for a "Trump Free Speech Rally" at Terry Schrunk Plaza, a federal enclave adjacent to city hall, tweeting that the rally could "only exacerbate an already unoriented situation" in the city, and called for withholding a allow for an ACT! for America rally at the same location.

ACT! for America subsequently cancelled its planned June 10 anti-Muslim March Against Sharia in Portland, moving it to Seattle. The Seattle Times described the rally's stated aim as "purportedly to raise awareness of the practices of genital mutilation and cutting of young girls and women, which the company attributes to the practice of Sharia law by faithful Muslims." Despite the group's claim that female genital mutilation FGM is a solely religious practice, the Anti-Defamation League noted that FGM is not sanctioned or even mentioned in the Quran or Sharia law.

ACT! for America demonstrators in New York City, Chicago, Santa Clara, Seattle, and other cities were outnumbered by counter-protesters. The marches were also attended by right-wing extremist groups such(a) as militia members and white supremacists. Demonstrators in front of Trump Tower Chicago also expressed assist for President Donald Trump.