Pro-Israel lobby group pressures ‘moderate’ US Democrat in new strategy
Critics claim AIPAC spending aims to intimidate
candidates questioning unconditional US support for Israeli policies.
Published On 4 Feb 2026
Washington, DC – A super PAC linked to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) has made its first major venture into the United States midterm
elections.
But this time around, the pro-Israel lobby group is
not targeting a progressive candidate pushing to reset US-Israel policy, but a
so-called “moderate” Democrat who tepidly questioned Washington’s unconditional
military support amid the genocidal war on Gaza.
The $2.2m spending by the United Democracy Project
(UDP) targeting former US Representative Tom Malinowski in advance of the
Democratic primary in New Jersey on Thursday comes as polls have consistently
shown surging dismay among Democratic voters over unwavering US support for Israel.
Amid shifting views, critics see the spending strategy
as a wider message to candidates as they prepare for party primaries in the
months in the run-up to the 2026 midterm elections, which will determine the
makeup of the US Senate and House of Representatives.
“It shows that they are very concerned, obviously,
about the shifting perspective of especially Democrats on funding for Israel,
and they’re very, very keen to keep Democrats elected who are out of touch with
the Democratic electorate more broadly,” Sadaf Jaffer, a former member of the
New Jersey General Assembly, who has herself been a critic of Malinowski’s past
refusal to take a harder line on Israel, told Al Jazeera.
Candidates in the 11-way primary are running to
represent a largely suburban district in central New Jersey considered
increasingly Democratic-leaning. The special election is scheduled for April
16.
However, UDP’s strategy appears focused on Malinowski;
neither AIPAC nor its super PAC has explicitly endorsed candidate Tahesha Way,
the former lieutenant governor of New Jersey, although she has won the
endorsement of another pro-Israel lobby group, the Democratic Majority for
Israel (DMFI).
“It may be [AIPAC’s] sense is that this is a way to
scare those in the middle of the road, who have started to express some
concerns about what’s going on and the funding that’s being sent to Israel,”
Jaffer said.
“It seems very excessive … but it may be an investment
in trying to intimidate others who are watching,” she said.
A familiar strategy
Parts of the strategy have become familiar. In the US
elections in 2024, the UDP poured about $35m into party primaries, with the
biggest buys aimed at scuttling Democratic candidates who called for cutting
off aid to Israel.
That included a combined $24m against progressive
congressmembers Jamaal Bowman and Cori Bush, who both lost their races to opponents running to
their right.
Like the messaging targeting those candidates, the
advertisement campaign against Malinowski has not specifically referenced
Israel; instead, it focuses on more domestic issues, including Malinowski’s
past stock trades and his 2019 vote in support of an annual Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) funding bill.
The line of criticism comes as support for US
immigration, and the DHS sub-agency ICE, has tanked among Democratic voters
amid the administration of US President Donald Trump’s mass deportation drive.
Usamah Andrabi, the communications director of Justice
Democrats, an organisation that supports progressive candidates regularly
targeted by AIPAC, called the approach particularly disingenuous, noting that
AIPAC had previously endorsed Malinowski despite the DHS funding vote.
During his previous three runs for Congress,
Malinowski received more than $378,000 from pro-Israel groups, including those
affiliated with AIPAC.
“It’s interesting, as always, to see that again you’re
not going to see a single television ad actually talking about their, quote
‘single issue’: Israel,” he told Al Jazeera.
“Tom Malinowski is no champion for progressive values
or for the Palestinian people, but he is not going to ask ‘how high?’ when they
say, ‘jump’,” Andrabi told Al Jazeera. “And that’s not enough for AIPAC. They
truly demand unconditional support for their policies.”
Malinowski had previously served as Washington
director of Human Rights Watch, which, during his tenure, lobbied for US aid
not to be used in Israeli abuses of Palestinian rights.
But as a congressman from 2019 to 2023, Malinowski
took a distinctly divergent path in Congress, including petitioning against
conditioning US aid to Israel.
Malinowski, who also served as assistant secretary of
state for democracy, human rights, and labour under former President Barack
Obama, has further enraged pro-Palestine advocates by suggesting that using the
terms “genocide” and “apartheid” to describe Israel’s approach towards
Palestinians in Gaza and the occupied West Bank fuels anti-Jewish sentiment in
the US.
Nevertheless, the candidate has become a vocal critic
of AIPAC’s approach in advance of Thursday’s vote, condemning the “dark-money”
influence on the race.
“I committed one sin in their minds,” Malinowski told
a small group of supporters in mid-January, as reported by the New Jersey Globe
news site.
“I was not willing to tell them that I would
unconditionally, unquestionably, blindly support any request for assistance
that Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu of Israel might make. That position
puts me in the mainstream, not just of all Americans, but of the Jewish and
pro-Israel community in this country,” he said.
‘A sour taste’
The UDP’s spending has also been condemned by other
pro-Israel lobbying groups, including J Street, which supports Israel, but has
staunchly criticised providing a “blank cheque” to the government of Prime
Minister Netanyahu.
“It weakens bipartisan support, alienates the next
generation – Jewish and non-Jewish alike – and ties Israel’s fate to the most
corrosive elements of American politics,” Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of the
group, which has endorsed Malinowski, said in a January post on Substack.
AIPAC and UDP did not respond to Al Jazeera’s requests
for comment on the spending initiative’s objectives.
But Beth Miller, the political director of Jewish
Voice for Peace Action, which advocates for Palestinian justice through US
policy, saw the attack on Malinowski as in line with AIPAC’s increasing embrace
of the Republican Party, which remains staunchly pro-Israel. She pointed to
UDP’s history of relying on donations from wealthy conservatives to influence
Democratic primaries.
Former assembly member Jaffer noted that the super PAC
had not targeted Analilia Mejia, a progressive in the race who has won
endorsements from US Senator Bernie Sanders and Representative Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez.
Some analysts have suggested AIPAC may see a win-win
approach in targeting Malinowski, either leading to the success of a candidate
like Way, who led the New Jersey-Israel Commission and has been embraced by
many right-wing Israeli news outlets, or a candidate like Mejia, who could be
seen as more vulnerable against a Republican in the general election.
Miller said the spending “should show every other
candidate that there is no middle or centrist lane that will protect them from
AIPAC spending attacks”.
“Democratic candidates watching the [New Jersey]
special election should learn that the politically and morally correct move is
to fully embrace Palestinian rights and demand an end to US complicity in
Israel’s apartheid and genocide,” she told Al Jazeera.
Both Justice Democrats’ Andrabi and Jaffer, meanwhile,
saw potential for the approach to backfire, particularly as AIPAC has become an
increasingly toxic brand in some segments of the Democratic Party.
“It’s definitely the most I’ve heard people who are
not particularly interested in Israel-Palestine talking about AIPAC,” Jaffer
told Al Jazeera, adding that outside spending in the race has left a “sour
taste” for some New Jersey residents.
Andrabi added that it was “interesting to see the
moderates of the world and the corporate Dems becoming willing to comment on
[AIPAC] now that one of their own is getting eaten alive by this spending”.
That comes as AIPAC and UDP have amassed a $100m war
chest heading into 2026.
“What [AIPAC] is really doing is expanding the base of
people who don’t like AIPAC and who will vote against candidates for being
supported by AIPAC,” he said.