By James Zogby
July 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - I came to Washington,
more than four decades ago, to run the Palestine Human
Rights Campaign. We founded the PHRC after hearing from
lawyers and human rights activists in Israel and the
Occupied Palestinian lands horrible stories of rights
being abused on a daily basis. Because these stories
weren’t known in the U.S., or they were ignored, we
launched the PHRC to shine a light on these violations
and mobilize support for the Palestinian victims.
Early on, we were successful in gaining the
endorsement of prominent civil rights leaders, major
anti-Vietnam war activists, and church leaders from a
number of major Christian denominations. There were,
however, only a few members of Congress who embraced our
efforts, and those who did often put themselves at risk
of incurring the wrath of the pro-Israel lobby – the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee. AIPAC made no
secret of their displeasure with elected officials who
were supportive of Palestinian rights and often
threatened members of Congress that if they didn’t back
off, they would be defeated.
In 1979, I received a call from the staff person of
one Congressman who had endorsed a few of our more
prominent cases and had been a consistent critic of
Israeli policies. He had repeatedly voted against bills
to give Israel more aid, citing their human rights
record. The staff person told me that her boss met with
representatives of AIPAC and someone from the Embassy of
Israel and a heated discussion had ensued. She said that
because he liked and trusted me, I should come over to
the office and speak with him. I did so, but never got
to see him. In fact, despite the fact that we had been
friends, he rarely spoke with me after that day. Not
only that, but during his next few decades in Congress
he never again voted against AIPAC-supported
legislation, all the while becoming one of the largest
recipients of pro-Israel financial contributions.
It was fear – the threat of defeat and the power of
campaign contributions, either for you (if you voted
“correctly”) or against you (if you dared to vote
“incorrectly”) – that shaped the way that Congress
behaved on matters involving Israel and the
Palestinians.
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Members of Congress are not, by definition, the
bravest souls on the planet. Because of the corrupting
influence of money in politics and the ever-increasing
amounts being spent on political campaigns (mainly for
television and digital advertising), elected officials
find themselves engaged in never-ending fundraising.
I remember expressing my frustration to former
Congressman John Conyers that members who consistently
voted to give Israel blank check support were acting in
an unprincipled way against the interests of the United
States. He laughed and told me that from the day they
were first elected, the only principle that guided a
Congressperson’s behavior was what they felt they needed
to do to be reelected. “In their minds,” he said, “the
national interests of the U.S. becomes synonymous with
their reelection.”
While there are a number of principled souls serving
in Congress, for too many members raising money and
getting reelected become ends in themselves. Many will
have issues that motivate their public service but as
they make their election calculations they’ll say “why
should I go against the banking industry, or the health
insurance and pharmaceutical companies, or the gun
lobby, or Israel – when doing so might only result in
money being raised to defeat me?”
Even very principled Congressmen have been known to
make such determinations. In 1980, after Israel had
expelled two Palestinian mayors, I went to Congress
seeking support. My first stop was a well-known human
rights champion. I said to him, “I’m asking for your
help because I know that you are a consistent advocate
for human rights. You’ve spoken out for victims in South
Africa, the Philippines, and Latin America. And you’re a
leader in the struggle for nuclear disarmament and civil
rights here in the US.” His response was “And if I do
what you’re asking me to do, money will be spent to
defeat me and I won’t be around to champion those causes
for which I’ve been fighting.” Now I knew and I
believed that he knew that wasn’t true. He was from a
very safe district and would be reelected until he
decided to retire. But the point he was really making
was “I’ve already got so many powerful interests lined
up against me, do I really need to add another one to
create more discomfort for me and my staff?” [Note: he
remained on office for many more terms, ultimately came
around on Palestinian rights and was never seriously
challenged.]
The money that could be raised for or against a
candidate was real, but it was never the decisive
factor. More consequential was the cultivated myth of
AIPAC’s invincibility.
AIPAC consolidated its hold early in the 1980’s when
they received two unearned gifts. They were able to
claim credit for the defeat of two prominent elected
Republicans, a Congressman and a Senator. I know
first-hand that although AIPAC did pour a great deal of
money into both elections, other critical factors
decided both contests. The Republican Congressman lost
because he had been redistricted from a
Republican-majority district to one that favored
Democrats. In addition, in the year he lost, there was a
Democratic wave in which the party won an additional 27
seats in Congress. But that didn’t stop AIPAC from
boasting that they had vanquished their foe and use this
victory to cement fear of their power.
The Senator’s defeat in 1984 also played into the
AIPAC myth. It’s true that a great deal of money was
raised to defeat him – including one million dollars to
run a more conservative individual as a third-party
candidate to siphon votes away from him. But, as he told
me just one month after his loss, the real reason for
his defeat was that for the first time Black voters had
endorsed his opponent. Up until that election, he had
run against more conservative Democrats and had won the
support of the Black community. The year he lost, he ran
against a liberal Democrat who had the backing of
newly-elected Chicago mayor, Harold Washington. That
didn’t stop AIPAC from once again boasted of their
victory in defeating a “foe of Israel.” In the years
that followed, one pro-Israel Senator became known for
taking colleagues aside who were undecided on an issue
of importance to Israel and reminding them of their
former colleague’s defeat saying, “you don’t want the
same thing to happen to you, do you?”
During the time of the Iron Curtain, when the Roman
Catholic Pope would name a Cardinal in an Eastern
European country, he would do so “in our heart” fearing
that if the name were released it would be cause for
persecution. Over the decades, I have compiled my own
list “in my heart” of Members of Congress who have told
me, in confidence, “I’m really with you, but I’m afraid
to go against AIPAC.” None have been “profiles in
courage.” Some, though publicly vocal supporters of
Israel, have been nothing more than outright
anti-Semites. I had a special name for them –
“anti-Semites for Israel.” But that’s what fear does. It
may win public support, but it also provokes silent
resentment.
I can be thankful that all this is changing – at
least among Democrats. The recent victory of Jamaal
Bowman over AIPAC-backed Eliot Engel; AIPAC being forced
to “give
permission” to members of Congress to oppose Israeli
annexation plans for the West Bank; and the
recent letter to U.S. Secretary of State, Mike
Pompeo, from 12 Representatives and one Senator not only
opposing annexation, but promising legislation to
condition U.S. aid to Israel to their policies in the
West Bank – all provide evidence that AIPAC may be
losing its grip on Congress. Here are some of the
reasons for this change: the outrageous arrogance of
Benjamin Netanyahu; the fact that today the dominant
pro-Israel lobby in Washington is the Christian
right-wing of the Republican Party; the virtual
marriage of Netanyahu and President Donald Trump; the
deep divisions in the Jewish community that have given
birth to powerful new groups that advocate for justice
and peace; the fact that Arab Americans have become
empowered and unafraid to speak out; and the growing
support for Palestinian rights among especially Black
voters, but also Latinos, Asian-Americans, and young
voters, in general.
It is these factors combined that have turned the
tide. I wish that it had been sooner. But it’s
happening now, and we are better for it.
James Joseph Zogby is the founder
and president of the Arab American Institute, a
Washington, D.C.–based organization that serves as a
political and policy research arm of the
Arab-American community.
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