AIPAC TARGETS BLACK DEMOCRATS — WHILE THE CONGRESSIONAL BLACK CAUCUS STAYS SILENT
AIPAC has given at least $3.6 million to the CBC’s old
guard since last year, while members of the Squad draw the Israel lobby’s ire.
September 21 2023
THE AMERICAN ISRAEL Public Affairs Committee, the country’s most
influential pro-Israel lobbying group, is recruiting candidates to challenge
progressive members of the Congressional Black Caucus in primaries next year.
The CBC has been silent on the AIPAC bid to challenge
at least three of its members who are part of the so-called Squad, a loose
group of progressive representatives. According to media reports and The
Intercept’s investigation, the only incumbents AIPAC has targeted so far in
this election cycle are CBC members.
The CBC’s silence on the electoral challenges reflects
the divide among Democrats on Israel — with progressives increasingly willing
to buck Capitol Hill orthodoxies and speak up for Palestinian rights — and
fundraising dynamics among caucus members. AIPAC has endorsed more than half of
CBC members. The AIPAC-backed members of the caucus, some 31 lawmakers, have
received a previously unreported total of at least $3.6 million from AIPAC
since February 2022, according to Federal Election Commission records.
The silence has given rise to calls for the CBC to
speak up for members under attack — especially given AIPAC’s propensity for
directing Republican money to challenge incumbent progressive Democrats in
primaries.
“AIPAC and its Republican donors are intentionally
targeting progressive members of the Congressional Black Caucus with right-wing
primary challenges,” said Alexandra Rojas, the executive director of Justice
Democrats, which backed all five CBC members from the Squad. “The CBC — and
every caucus in Congress — has the opportunity now to demonstrate their power
and stand up for all incumbents against AIPAC’s role in funneling GOP dollars
into Democratic primaries.”
AIPAC is seeking to challenge CBC members Reps. Ilhan
Omar, D-Minn., and Jamaal Bowman, D-N.Y., because of their support for putting
restrictions on U.S. aid to Israel, Jewish Insider reported last month.
According to three sources with knowledge of the
recruiting process, who asked for anonymity to protect professional
relationships, AIPAC asked Pittsburgh-area Democrat Lindsay Powell to challenge
Rep. Summer Lee, D-Penn.; Powell declined. Allegheny County Controller Corey
O’Connor also declined an AIPAC invitation to challenge Lee, according to two
of the sources. (Powell declined to comment, and O’Connor did not respond to a
request for comment.)
Bhavini Patel, a council member in the city of
Edgewood, Pennsylvania, is reportedly planning to run against Lee. Jewish
Insider reported that it was unable to confirm if AIPAC had met
with Patel. (Patel did not respond to a request for comment.)
While AIPAC declined to respond to specific questions
about its involvement in the challenges against CBC members, the pro-Israel
lobby defended its record supporting Black candidates for Congress.
“AIPAC proudly endorsed more than half the Black
Caucus last cycle and United Democracy Project” — an AIPAC-backed super PAC —
“helped ensure pro-Israel African American Democrats in Ohio, North Carolina,
and Maryland won their elections,” an AIPAC spokesperson said in a statement to
The Intercept. “While we have not made any decisions on specific races this
cycle, we are constantly evaluating every seat held by a detractor of the
U.S.-Israel relationship, and we base our assessments exclusively on their
anti-Israel votes and statements.”
The CBC did not respond to a request for comment.
Old Guard Versus the Squad
Five Black progressive officials have joined the CBC’s
ranks since 2019. Their additions strained already shifting dynamics in the
caucus, which has long been governed by traditional structures of seniority and
patronage.
The caucus has sometimes stood against the new crop of
rising Black progressives. The CBC bet against Rep. Ayanna Pressley, D-Mass.,
in 2018 and backed her white incumbent opponent, former Rep. Mike Capuano;
Pressley won and joined the CBC. Bowman angered the old guard of the caucus
when he endorsed progressive candidate Cori Bush in her 2020 primary in
Missouri against Rep. William Lacy Clay, a centrist who had been a CBC member
for two decades. Bush also won and joined the CBC.
Divisions on Israel in the CBC, however, go beyond
election alliances to policy stances and votes. Since taking office,
progressive CBC members — including Omar, Bowman, Lee, Bush, and Pressley — have criticized human rights abuses against
Palestinians or voted against military aid to Israel. They were among the 10
House Democrats who voted against a July resolution to absolve Israel of being
an apartheid state. The critical stance on U.S. support for Israel drew AIPAC’s
ire, with the group ramping up its efforts to challenge the CBC incumbents.
AIPAC’s shifting campaign strategy presents
contradictions for the CBC. The caucus’s leaders have close relationships with
AIPAC, but the group has also historically put an emphasis on the importance of
protecting incumbents.
Since 2022, the CBC’s top AIPAC recipients include Rep. Glenn Ivey, D-Md., who has taken $756,000 from the group; House
Democratic Caucus Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., who has taken $485,300; Rep.
Valerie Foushee, D-N.C., who has taken $456,800; Rep. Ritchie Torres, D-N.Y., who has taken $459,900; and Rep. Shontel
Brown, D-Ohio, who has taken $349,600.
Jeffries, who has led congressional efforts to protect incumbents against primary challengers, is a close ally of AIPAC, as are CBC leader Rep. Steven
Horsford, D-Nev., and CBC PAC leader Rep. Gregory Meeks. CBC members have regularly led and attended AIPAC’s
annual trips to Israel, conferences, and other events. (Horsford, Meeks, and
CBC PAC did not provide comment for this story.)
The alliance has put CBC members at odds. Omar and
Bush joined other progressives in protesting an official congressional address
by Israel President Isaac Herzog in July amid efforts to radically politicize the country’s
judiciary system. Jeffries said he welcomed Herzog “with open arms.” The next
month, he led AIPAC’s annual congressional delegation to Israel.
More centrist CBC members and their political allies
have been involved in combatting progressive gains in the Democratic Party. In
June 2021, Jeffries, along with Reps. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., and Terri
Sewell, D-Ala., another recipient of AIPAC cash, launched Team Blue PAC to protect Democratic members facing primary
challenges from their left. And last June, Democratic operatives closely
aligned with CBC leaders launched a new dark-money group to fend off primary challengers.
In their individual capacities, however, some of the
centrist CBC members are supporting their progressive colleagues. After news
broke that AIPAC was recruiting Omar’s challenger, Jeffries endorsed her last
month.
For some observers, Jeffries’s ascendency in
Democratic leadership, and many CBC members’ support of it, complicates the
political calculus. To invite a fight with an influential group like AIPAC
could prove folly for Jeffries, souring relationships in the wider Democratic
caucus where the group still holds sway. “Some of the older members have
trouble letting go,” said one senior Democratic strategist who requested
anonymity in order to speak freely. “And I think more than anything, they want
a Black speaker of the House, not protecting progressive members.”
Jeffries’s spokesperson Christie Stephenson declined
to say whether Jeffries planned to endorse Lee and Bowman but said Jeffries
would keep backing Democratic incumbents across the political spectrum.
“Leader Hakeem Jeffries intends to continue his
practice of supporting the reelection of every single House Democratic
incumbent,” she said, “from the most progressive to the most centrist, and all
points in between.”
AIPAC’s Republican Money
The rift between AIPAC and progressive CBC members
reflects a broader disconnect between more senior and moderate CBC members and
the caucus’s small but growing progressive wing. Those frictions have bled into
other recent primary elections. CBC members reportedly pushed former Rep. Mondaire Jones to run against
Bowman last year. Bowman is one of the five progressive Squad members who are
also part of the CBC.
“The CBC should be sounding the alarm and should be
concerned,” said Democratic strategist Camille Rivera, a partner at New Deal
Strategies. “We need to be very careful about letting power and influence
change the overall goal of the caucus, which is to protect Black incumbents and
expand representation, especially those that have been doing the work and
representing their constituents. We shouldn’t let any entity try to divide and
conquer.”
AIPAC’s attacks on Black progressives are not new. The
group funneled money from GOP donors to back the more centrist Brown’s successful House campaigns against Ohio
progressive Nina Turner. And the group spent $4 million to try to thwart Lee’s insurgent 2022 campaign.
Even powerful progressives have fallen amid the Israel
lobby’s attacks. Endorsements from former Democratic presidential nominee
Hillary Clinton and Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., weren’t enough to help former
Rep. Donna Edwards, D- Md., overcome the $6 million AIPAC spent against her in her bid to reclaim
her House seat. Pelosi, a pro-Israel stalwart and at the time the speaker of
the House, rebuked AIPAC for its attacks against Edwards. Her opponent,
Ivey, the top CBC recipient of AIPAC cash, won the primary by 16 points and
went on to win the general election by a landslide.
AIPAC’s strategy fits into a larger trend of
Republicans and Democrats teaming up to defeat progressive candidates critical
of U.S. support to Israel. Republican donors poured last-minute cash into former New York Rep. Eliot Engel’s
reelection campaign in the face of Bowman’s insurgent 2018 challenge.
Pennsylvania billionaire Jeffrey Yass, a major GOP donor and funder of the Israeli think tank leading the rightward lurch in the country’s
judiciary, also funded a PAC run by Democrats and dedicated to challenging progressives in Democratic primaries.
Lee told The Intercept that AIPAC used Republican
money to fund ads meant to discourage Black voters from coming out on Election
Day.
“AIPAC funneled money from Republican billionaires to
spend $5 million attacking me with baseless lies and racist tactics,” Lee said.
She said political ads accused her of having ties to far-right figures like
former President Donald Trump “in order to keep Black voters from showing up to
vote.”
Lee drew a contrast to AIPAC’s support for scores of
“insurrectionist” Republicans who supported election denial and “shared the
same goals as a mob of armed white supremacists and antisemites.”
“Now they’re targeting Black incumbent champions for
poor, working-class, Black folks in districts where they’ve never been
represented,” she said. “These attacks add fuel to the fire of fascism tearing
away the history, civil rights, and lives of Black Americans, who are the base
of the Democratic party.”
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