AIPAC’s new strategy: Spend millions on elections, don’t mention Israel
The lobbying organization’s first foray into electoral politics
has been marked by spending GOP megadonor dollars on Democratic primaries. Why?
AUGUST 9, 2022
Written by
Eli
Clifton
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee’s
announcement late last year that it would launch a super PAC, the United
Democracy Project, and endorse candidates sent shockwaves through foreign
policy and advocacy communities.
AIPAC had
long refrained from engaging in electoral politics, preferring instead to lobby
members of Congress to support maintaining Israel’s nearly $4 billion in annual
military and other aid from the United States and to oppose diplomatic efforts
to constrain Iran’s nuclear program.
But now that
the super PAC is active, raising over $27
million, and running ads to support or oppose Democratic primary candidates
for the 2022 midterms, it’s becoming clear what UDP’s fundraising and spending
strategy are: raise money from hawkish Trump-supporting GOP big donors and spend
on ads to benefit Democratic candidates who won’t question U.S. policy towards
the U.S.’s biggest foreign military aid recipient.
Curiously
though, the
ads paid for by UDP, affiliated with the largest pro-Israel group in
the country, don’t mention the group’s central issue: Israel.
That might
be because AIPAC’s central issue, Israel, has remarkably little salience with
U.S. voters. Polling conducted
between 2010 and 2020 by the J Street, a Democratic Party-aligned group often
at odds with AIPAC on a host of issues including the Iran nuclear deal and aid to
the Palestinian Authority, reveals that Jewish voters — a demographic often
expected to prioritize candidates’ views on Israel — place an extremely low
priority on Israel-related issue in elections. In a decade of polling, J Street
found that Israel was a top-two voting issue for between -four and ten percent
of Jewish voters.
In June,
AIPAC rankled Democrats and earned extensive coverage in
Jewish American and Israeli news outlets by endorsing 37 Republicans who voted
against certifying President Joe Biden’s election victory.
AIPAC defended
its decision to endorse the candidates to Ron Kampeas at the Jewish
Telegraph Agency. “As a single-issue organization, we remain focused on our mission
of building bipartisan support in Congress to strengthen the U.S.-Israel
relationship,” AIPAC spokesperson Marshall Wittman told Kampeas.
But AIPAC’s
super PAC didn’t seem to get that message. Their ads don’t mention Israel,
AIPAC’s “single Issue,” and explicitly made an issue of the contested election
in an ad boosting Michigan State Senator Adam Hollier. “When Donald Trump tried
to throw out Detroit’s presidential vote, Adam Hollier fought alongside
Governor Whitmer to stop him,” said
an ad supporting Hollier in the August 2 Democratic primary for
Michigan’s 13th district. Hollier lost the primary but the ad revealed the
cynical opportunism behind AIPAC’s electoral strategy that leads the
organization to endorse candidates who opposed certifying the election results while
running ads promoting another candidate’s work to certify the election, all
while avoiding mention of the “single issue” that qualifies candidates from
both sides of the contested election to earn AIPAC’s support.
Last week,
AIPAC PAC Director Marilyn Rosenthal and United Democracy Project CEO Rob
Bassin answered questions about their electoral strategy from Jewish
Insider. Rosenthal said their campaign work “is allowing us to
clearly define who is and who is not pro-Israel.”
When asked
about Israel not playing a significant role in AIPAC’s campaign messaging,
Bassin responded, “I would just say about that, first of all, the issues that
UDP has focused on have been the issues that are foremost on the minds of
voters.”
“That being
said, I think the views of the candidates on the U.S.-Israel relationship have
been made clear on their websites and their position papers and in their voting
records,” he added.
Perhaps the
most telling aspect of UDP’s work has been where the group raises and spends
its money. Two of UDP’s biggest individual
funders are Home Depot co-founder Bernard Marcus and hedge fund
manager Paul Singer. Both contributed $1 million to the UDP super PAC. Both are
Trump backers and Republican Party megadonors, regularly contributing millions
of dollars to Republican candidates in each election cycle. That’s in sharp
contrast to where UDP spends
its money: Democratic primaries.
UDP’s
decision to influence Democratic primaries in order to defeat incumbents deemed
insufficiently pro-Israel, with funds partially originating from Republican
megadonors, while actively avoiding mention of the group’s organizing principle —
“the belief that America’s partnership with our democratic ally Israel benefits
both countries” — may be a symptom of the Democratic Party’s drift away from
unconditional support for Israel.
The UDP did
not respond to a request for comment about why their campaign ads avoid mention
of Israel.
Only 0.5
percent of Democrats listed Israel as their first choice when asked to “[n]ame
the TWO countries that you think are the most important allies of the United
States today,” according to a University of Maryland survey conducted
in March. Only 0.9 percent listed Israel as their second choice. (The most
popular choices by Democrats were The United Kingdom and Canada.) Among
Republicans, 20 percent listed Israel as their first choice selection and 9.3
percent listed Israel as their second choice.
With those
starkly contrasting numbers, it’s clear that AIPAC has its work cut out for it
in boosting its preferred candidates in Democratic primaries. Under the
circumstances, it makes good sense to use Republican megadonors’ money and make
no mention of Israel if AIPAC wants to raise money and effectively engage
Democratic voters.
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