<http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=28394>
http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=28394
CAIR by the Numbers             
By
<file:///C:/Program%20Files/Common%20Files/Microsoft%20Shared/Stationery/aut
hors.asp?ID=3597> Patrick Poole
FrontPageMagazine.com | May 24, 2007 

Last week the
<http://www.discoverthenetworks.org/groupProfile.asp?grpid=6176> Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) released their
<http://www.cair.com/pdf/2006AnnualReport.pdf> 2006 Annual Report, which
provides some interesting information to outside observers of the radical
Islamic front group. Back in February, I noted in an article here at
FrontPage, " <http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=26860>
Numbers Don't Lie", that despite CAIR's claims to be "the largest Islamic
civil rights organization in America", the facts hardly match their
propaganda. In that article I wrote:  

An inspection of CAIR's most recent publicly available IRS Form 990 (2004)
shows for that year they received $119,029 in membership dues for that year
(line 3). But at $25 per membership (the current rate is $35), that would
mean that in 2004, CAIR only had 4,761 dues-paying members - less than 5,000
members out of 8 million Muslims in America. This would mean that CAIR only
represents 1 out of every 1,680 Muslims. Even if a lower 6 million Muslim
population figure were assumed, CAIR would still only be able to claim
representation for 1 out of every 1,260 Muslims for that year. 

 

But their new 2006 Annual Report and their recently posted 2005 IRS Form 990
shows that CAIR continues to hemorrhage members. Whereas my estimates for
2004 showed that based on their membership receipts in that period they had
approximately 4,761 dues-paying members, in 2005 their membership plummeted
dramatically to an estimated 2,615. This puts CAIR on the same comparative
membership level as the American Indian
<http://brownvboard.org/brwnqurt/05-2/05-2c.htm> Kaw Nation in Kansas, the
<http://www.ewh.ieee.org/r2/cleveland/newsltr/2002/200205.pdf> Cleveland
Section of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, the
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_News_Design> Society for News
Design, the University of Texas
<http://www.utexas.edu/features/archive/2002/band.html> Longhorn Alumni
Band, and the South Dakota chapter of the National Federation of Independent
Businesses (NFIB), none of whom are consulted near as frequently by Beltway
politicians or sought after for comment by the media establishment as CAIR.

 

The steep decline in CAIR membership is directly correlated in membership
receipts (line 3 of the Form 990), which dropped off from $119,029 in 2004
to $65,377 - a decrease of $53,652, or almost half (45 percent) of the
previous year's membership revenues. If this trend continues at the same
pace, their 2006 Form 990 numbers will show $29,419 in membership revenues,
representing only 1,177 members, roughly comparable to the membership of the
Genealogical Society of Rockingham County, Virginia and the Garden Club of
Tacoma, Washington - neither of which has a Washington DC lobbying office.

 

Another startling statistic drawn from CAIR's 2006 Annual Report (page 23,
"CAIR Financial Activity Report") is that the organization, which lists its
mission as "civil rights and advocacy", only commits 9 percent of program
services to civil rights and 10 percent to government affairs - less than
one-fifth of their program expenditures. With $1,891,290 spent on program
services, this means that only $359,345 (19 percent) was spent on its core
mission, $135,013 less than what was spent on fundraising and events by the
group ($494,358). 

 

In another bizarre twist, CAIR also reports (page 23) that 7 percent of its
program service expenditures ($132,390) were spent on their membership; yet
by its own admission, it only collected $58,750 in membership dues for that
period, a net loss of $73,640.

 

To its credit, CAIR's IRS Form 990s report that they do make money on their
annual fundraising banquets, but just barely. At their
<http://www.cair-net.org/convention2004/convention2004.asp> 10th Annual
Fundraising Banquet in 2004, the event grossed $170,389 in contributions and
banquet fees, but paid out $152,917 in expenses, meaning that the group
raised a mere $17,472 from the event. In 2005, their
<https://www.cair-net.org/2005banquet> annual fundraiser grossed $132,421,
almost one-quarter less (23 percent) than the year before, but only had
$106,979 in expenses, netting the group $25,442 in funds raised during the
event. The drop in membership may be responsible for the drop attendance at
the fundraisers: in 2004, more than 1,100 people showed up at the event; by
2006, the annual report states that only around 1,000 attendees were
present.

 

Since representatives from CAIR have identified their organization as "the
Islamic NAACP", a comparison between CAIR and the NAACP might be helpful. In
the same period (2005) that CAIR brought in $65,377 in membership revenue
purporting to represent 7 million Muslims, the NAACP received $3.317 million
from a population of approximately 40 million African-Americans. Even after
adjusting for the population size differences between the two, CAIR's
membership footprint amongst their constituency is still is only one-tenth
that of the NAACP. CAIR, you are no NAACP.

 

Also seen in the 2004 and 2005 IRS Form 990s is that direct contributions to
the organization (line 1) also saw a sharp decline, dropping from $2,166,270
in 2004 to $1,667,057 in 2005, losing almost one-quarter (23 percent) of
their contributions from the previous year.

 

CAIR supporters might note that those reports indicate an increase of
$332,871 in spending on program services (line 13) - a leap of almost
one-quarter from the previous year (24.1 percent) - but that number was
achieved only by shifting $335,465 from management and general expenses
(line 14) between years. Meanwhile, fundraising expenses (line 15) more than
doubled, from $262,914 in 2004 to $535,555 in 2005 (a $272,641 increase).

 

The grim portrait painted by this new financial information shows not only
an organization in dire crisis, but also a stark contrast to CAIR's public
rhetoric. Even though it still claims to represent "the interests of more
than seven million American Muslims", in fact, its supporters in the
American Muslim community are barely a handful. And its footprint amongst
that community is shrinking rapidly. Based on my membership estimates, we
find that CAIR actually only represents 1 out of every 2,676 Muslims in the
most recent period that information is available, as opposed to 1 in every
1,680 the year before. 

 

Paradoxically, at the very moment that their representation amongst their
own constituency is plummeting, CAIR's stock among political and the media
establishment continues to climb. If Wall Street rules applied to K Street,
someone would be in jail for inflating their stock. Policymakers and pundits
alike would do well to look at CAIR by the numbers rather than by their
noise. What they would discover is that American Muslims are abandoning CAIR
en masse, and the numbers still don't lie.

 



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