As the
full speech makes clear, he was referring to the
indisputable fact that while Israel continues to
take billions of dollars every year from the U.S. — far
more than any other country receives in aid — it
continually disregards and violates U.S. requests to
stop ongoing expansion of illegal Israeli
settlements, often in ways seemingly designed to
impose the greatest humiliation on its benefactor:
Stop,
you know why are we sending a mill — $2.8
billion dollars a year over there when they
won’t even honor our request to stop building in
East Jerusalem? Where is the future Palestinian
state going to be if it’s colonized before it
even gets up off the ground? …
… Now
you got Clinton, Biden, and the president who’s
told them — stop. Now this has happened before.
They beat back a president before. Bush 41 said
— stop, and they said — we don’t want to stop,
and by the way we want our money and we want it
now. [Ellison laughs.] Right? You know, I mean
we can’t allow, we’re Americans, right? We can’t
allow another country to treat us like we’re
their ATM. Right? And so we ought to stand up as
Americans.
Equally
sinful in the eyes of the ADL was this statement on
U.S. foreign policy:
The
United States foreign policy in the Middle East
is governed by what is good or bad through a
country of 7 million people. A region of 350
million all turns on a country of 7 million.
Does that make sense? [A male says “no.”] Is
that logic? Right? When the people who, when the
Americans who trace their roots back to those
350 million get involved, everything changes.
As J.J.
Goldberg of The Forward
noted, Ellison wasn’t lamenting the insidious
influence of U.S. Jews — as the ADL shamefully
claimed — but rather was “plainly describing how
American Muslims could have greater influence on
American policy if they learned to organize.”
And agree
or disagree with those positions, it is an
indisputable fact that Israel receives far more in
U.S. aid than any other country yet continually does
exactly that which numerous U.S. presidents have
insisted it not do, often to the detriment of U.S.
interests. And many prominent foreign policy experts
— including
David Petraeus — have warned that excessive U.S.
support for the worst actions of the Israeli
government endangers U.S. national security by
alienating Arabs in the region and fueling support
for anti-American terrorism. The idea that a member
of Congress is not permitted to debate these
policies without being branded an anti-Semite is
sheer insanity: malicious insanity at that.
But that
insanity is par for the course in Washington, where
anyone who even questions U.S. policy toward Israel
is smeared in this way — from
James Baker to
Howard Dean to
Bernie Sanders and even
Donald Trump. So pernicious is this framework
that the U.S. Senate
just passed legislation expressly
equating what it regards as unfair criticism of
the Israeli government with “anti-Semitism.” And
when one is an American Muslim, ugly stereotypes and
pervasive Islamophobia are added to this toxic brew
to make the smears worse by many magnitudes.
This smear campaign
against Ellison received
a major boost Friday night when the single
largest funder of both the Democratic Party and the
Hillary Clinton campaign, the Israeli-American
billionaire Haim Saban, said at the Brookings
Institution, a part of which he funds: “If you go
back to his positions, his papers, his speeches, the
way he has voted, he is clearly an anti-Semite and
anti-Israel individual.” Saban added: “Keith Ellison
would be a disaster for the relationship between the
Jewish community and the Democratic Party.”
That Saban
plays such a vital role in Democratic Party politics
says a great deal. To the New York Times,
this is how he described himself: “I’m a
one-issue guy and my issue is Israel.” In late 2015,
Ali Gharib
wrote in The Forward: “Saban’s top priority
isn’t a liberal vision of American life. It’s
Israel.” When Hillary Clinton in 2015
condemned the boycott movement aimed at ending
Israeli settlements, she did it in the form of a
letter
addressed personally to Saban.
The
Democratic Party’s central reliance on billionaire
funders like Saban is a key reason that debates over
Israel policy are not permitted within the party.
It’s why any attempt to raise such issues will
prompt systematic campaigns of reputation
destruction like the one we’re witnessing with
Ellison.
To get a
sense for just how prohibited the most benign and
basic debates are when it comes to Israel, consider
the quotes from Ellison’s college days
dug up by CNN as supposedly incriminating. In
1990, while a law student at the University of
Minnesota, Ellison blasted the university president
for condemning a speaking event featuring the
anti-Zionist civil rights icon Kwame Ture (also
known as Stokely Carmichael); Ellison’s argument was
that all ideas, including Zionism, should be
regarded as debatable in a college environment:
The
University’s position appears to be this:
Political Zionism is off-limits no matter what
dubious circumstances Israel was founded under;
no matter what the Zionists do to the
Palestinians; and no matter what wicked regimes
Israel allies itself with — like South Africa.
This position is untenable.
In other
words, Ellison — 26 years ago, while a student —
simply argued that college campuses should not be
deemed “safe spaces” in which debates over Israel
are barred: an utterly mainstream view when the
topic to be debated is something other than Israel.
Leave aside
the bizarre attempt to use someone’s college-aged
political activism against them three decades later.
As my colleague Zaid Jilani
very ably documented several days ago, even the
most inflammatory of Ellison’s campus statements —
including his long-ago-renounced praise for the
Nation of Islam — were grounded in righteous
opposition to “white supremacy and the policies of
the state of Israel” and “show him expressing
sympathy for the plight of underprivileged whites
and making clear that he was not antagonistic toward
Jewish people.” Writing about the smear campaign
circulating on the internet against Ellison, The
Forward’s Goldberg said he found “the evidence to be
either frivolous, distorted or simply false.”
As CNN
itself acknowledged when digging up these old
Ellison quotes: “None of the records reviewed found
examples of Ellison making any anti-Semitic comments
himself.” How is that, by itself, not the end of the
controversy?
The reason why it isn’t is
a glaring irony. With the advent of Donald Trump and
policies such as banning all Muslims from the
country, Democrats this year
incorporated anti-Islamophobia rhetoric into their
repertoire. Yet what is being done to Ellison by
the ADL, Saban, and others is Islamophobia in its
purest and most classic form.
Faiz Shakir
is a senior adviser to Harry Reid who previously
worked for Nancy Pelosi and the ThinkProgress blog
at the Center for American Progress. He explains,
from personal experience, that the vile treatment to
which Ellison is now being subjected is common for
American Muslims in political life: