How AIPAC is losing bipartisan support in
Washington
It was once described as the 'most effective' lobbying group in
Washington, but AIPAC is beginning to lose support as it turns against its
critics - most of whom are Democrats
By
in
Washington
Published date: 14
February 2020
"A true friend of
Israel." These were the words Barack Obama used when describing himself to AIPAC, a day
after he secured the Democratic party nomination in 2008.
Standing in front of thousands of attendees in Washington, Obama, who
was only 47 at the time, went on to thank the pro-Israel lobby
for helping advance "bipartisan consensus to support and defend
our ally - Israel".
Those comments were a far cry from the latter stages of his presidency when the interest group rebuked America's first black president and
spearheaded efforts to derail his signature foreign policy accomplishment - the
Iran nuclear deal.
AIPAC, short for the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, has
always presented itself as a bipartisan organization aiming to maintain support
for Israel from across the US political spectrum.
Republican and Democratic presidents have praised the group and some of
the measures it has pushed have gained unanimous bipartisan support in
Congress.
But times are changing. Once dubbed "the
most effective general-interest group" by former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich, AIPAC was called a "hate group" by a senior Democratic
congresswoman on Wednesday.
"Hate is used as a weapon to incite and silence dissent.
Unfortunately, this is my recent experience with AIPAC – the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee," Congresswoman Betty McCollum said in a
blistering statement.
Her photo had been featured - along with fellow House members Rashida
Tlaib and Ilhan Omar - in AIPAC ads accusing "radicals in the Democratic
Party" of pushing antisemitic and anti-Israel policies "down the
throats of the American people".
The posts, which have since been deleted, went as far as likening Congress members critical of Israel
to the Islamic State (IS) group, also known as ISIS.
McCollum, who had introduced a bill aiming to
prevent US assistance to Israel from contributing to the imprisonment and abuse
of Palestinian children, was having none of it.
"AIPAC wants its followers to believe that my
bill, H.R. 2407, to protect Palestinian children from being
interrogated, abused, and even tortured in Israeli military prisons is a threat
more sinister than ISIS," she said.
"This is not empty political rhetoric. It is
hate speech."
The response came days after AIPAC took down the
ads and half-heartedly apologized for them. But the episode highlighted the erosion of that
bipartisan consensus over Israel that Obama cited in 2008.
AIPAC's
conundrum
Three months after Democrats assumed the majority in
the US House of Representatives last year, their top leaders appeared at the
annual conference of AIPAC, assuring the group that Congress will maintain its
steadfast support for Israel.
There had been warning signs that the bipartisan
consensus in favor of Israel may be eroding. Left-wing progressives had
been increasing their clout in Democratic politics, shifting the conversation
about Israel and Palestine amongst Democrats in the process.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Majority Leader
Steny Hoyer have kept their word to AIPAC in pushing pro-Israel measures in the
congressional chambers that they control - including a resolution condemning the Boycott, Divestment and
Sanctions (BDS) movement.
But with President Donald Trump giving the Israeli
government everything that it wants and then some, top Democrats have found it
difficult to fully back the White House's policies.
In fact, many of them forcefully rejected the president's AIPAC-backed plan to end the conflict, which would allow
Israel to annex all of its illegal settlements in the West Bank. Meanwhile,
progressives' criticism of Israel grew more vocal.
That has created a conundrum for
AIPAC: how to favor the policies of one political party without
alienating the other?
"AIPAC is dealing with a fundamental contradiction. They are
promoting a policy of no accountability for Israel - a carte blanche for
whatever Israel does; and they want to be bipartisan," said Omar Baddar,
deputy director of the Arab American Institute, a Washington-based advocacy
group.
"There's a problem here. The
reality of our political discourse is that no accountability for Israel is not
a bipartisan issue."
The ads against Democrats and McCollum's forceful condemnation of the
group exposes that contradiction, he added.
"I really suspect it's really a matter of time before we see the
next outburst," Baddar told MEE.
Beth Miller, government affairs manager at JVP Action, a political
advocacy group linked to Jewish Voice for Peace, echoed
Baddar's comments, saying that American progressives are adopting the
Palestinian cause as a core issue in their agenda.
"It used to be true that AIPAC had bipartisan support, but that is
strongly waning… As the left progressive flank of the Democratic Party
grows, which it clearly is, that means that there's also going to be less
support for groups like AIPAC," Miller said.
She added that advocacy for Palestinian human rights is becoming a
"natural part" of the push against Trump's agenda.
"The more we as Americans learn about what is happening in Israel,
the more people are supporting Palestinian human rights," Miller told MEE.
"And so, we are in a moment where groups like AIPAC that are
strongly trying to push anti-Palestinian policies and anti-Palestinian rhetoric
are finding themselves in an increasingly partisan space."
The
presidential race
With Democrats moving to pick their nominee who
will try to unseat Trump, that schism between the pro-Israel lobby and the
party is likely to become wider.
AIPAC will not merely be torn between
unconditionally supportive Republicans and Democrats more critical of Israel.
Trump himself will be on the ballot, facing an opponent who will likely draw
distinctions with him on foreign policy.
Moreover, Bernie Sanders, the frontrunner in the Democratic race, has called
for an even-handed approach to the Middle East conflict, where US policy would
not only be pro-Israel but also "pro-Palestinian". The Vermont senator is also
proposing conditioning US aid to Israel if it does not work
to end the occupation and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.
"I imagine that relationship is going to become more and more
antagonistic," Baddar said.
"As time goes on, that contrast will be sharpened. I do envision a
scenario in which AIPAC is going all out in attack against candidate Bernie
Sanders if his lead continues."
In fact, an AIPAC-linked group has been running negative
ads against Sanders, centering on his health and electability - not foreign
policy.
Columnist Jonathan Tobin argued earlier this week that it was no longer
feasible for AIPAC in 2020 to deliver on its mission of defending Israel in a
bipartisan way.
"At a time of unprecedented hyper-partisanship, and with the
possibility that support for Israel will be a point of partisan contention in
the fall presidential campaign - especially if the Democrats nominate Bernie
Sanders, it’s hard to see how AIPAC can continue to navigate between the
parties," he wrote in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
"It just isn’t possible to attack Democrats who are anti-Israel
without sounding pro-Trump."
Vile attacks'
The rise of Sanders in the polls and the AIPAC ads
attacking Democratic Congress members point to an indisputable shift in support
of Palestinians within the party.
Yet, many - if not most - Democrats in Congress
have maintained their strong commitment to the US relationship with Israel and
ties with AIPAC.
In fact on Thursday, the pro-Israel lobby
posted several tweets thanking top Democratic legislators for
denouncing the UN Human Rights Council over publishing a list
of businesses with
ties to West Bank settlements considered illegal by most of the international
community.
Still, the attacks on Democratic Congress
members put some of AIPAC's allies in the party in an uncomfortable
position - between defending their colleagues and maintaining the bipartisan
support that the pro-Israel lobby enjoys.
Hoyer, the number two Democrat in the House
and a staunch supporter of Israel said he was not pleased with
AIPAC's recent ads.
"I strongly disagreed with the ads and it was
appropriate that AIPAC apologized," Hoyer told MEE in a statement.
"The Democratic Party continues to be a party
that is strongly supportive of Israel. Support for Israel should never be made
into a partisan issue."
McCollum had called on the
Democratic Party to "take a stand" in support of human rights.
"AIPAC's language is intended to demonize, not elevate a policy
debate. Vile attacks such as this may be commonplace in the Trump era, but they
should never be normalized."
In her statement, McCollum challenged AIPAC's claims of being a bipartisan
group.
"AIPAC claims to be a bipartisan organization, but its use of the hate
speech actually makes it a hate group," the congresswoman said.
"By weaponizing antisemitism and hate to silence debate, AIPAC is
taunting Democrats and mocking our core values.
"I hope Democrats understand what is at stake and take a stand
because working to advance peace, human rights, and justice is not sinister -
it is righteous."
For her part, Congresswoman Tlaib, who is Palestinian American, praised
McCollum for calling out AIPAC.
"I commend the courage and leadership of my colleague,
Congresswoman Betty McCollum. She's right- hate speech incites violence
and seeks to silence dissent," Tlaib told MEE in an email.
"In the fight for peace, equality, dignity and human rights, we
must push back and call out any attempt to stop us on the path toward justice
for Palestinians, Israelis, and people across the world."
AIPAC did not return MEE's request for comment.
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