A new progressive wave is exposing the Democratic rift over Israel — just the way Republicans want it

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Le changement démographique amène une contestation du soutien à Israël : c'est le Grand Remplacement au Parti démocrate

One rookie Democratic congresswoman decried what she termed the "occupation of Palestine."Another newcomer backs a one-state solution that critics fear could render Israel a Jewish state no longer. Yet another first-time lawmaker has tweeted that Israel "hypnotized the world" and apologized after insinuating Jewish cash directs policy on Capitol Hill.



The politics of Israel has struck a divisive chord between old-guard Democrats and the party's freshman class of 2019 — a fissure that's likely to only deepen approaching the 2020 primaries, and as public opinion polling shows Americans are increasingly willing to be more broadly critical of Israel.



Look no further than this week for the latest example of a Democrat breaking with the party's long-standing pro-Israel foreign policy.



On Monday, Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar apologized for remarks that drew repudiations from her own party, including from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who admonished Omar for trafficking in "anti-Semitic tropes" about Jewish lobbying money and political influence.



Gone are the days of a "wall-to-wall coalition" of support for Israel, says the Israeli-American-Canadian scholar Bernard Avishai, author of The Hebrew Republic: How Secular Democracy and Global Enterprise Will Bring Israel Peace At Last. The schism in the Democratic party now risks inviting Republicans to make gains from an opening in the fault lines between establishment lawmakers and more liberal newcomers.



U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the United Nations in New York on Sept. 26, 2018. Last week, Netanyahu's re-election campaign unfurled giant billboards of the two leaders shaking hands. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)



"Within the Democratic Party, that support certainly isn't stable. Among young people, there's a natural willingness, even insistence, on criticizing the Netanyahu government and its theocratic tendencies and its settlement policies," Avishai said from his home in Jerusalem. "All of that is going to be second nature to young people."



A danger, he said, is that some freshmen members may not yet be fully informed on Israeli-Palestinian relations.



Israel fight could come to head at DNC 2020


Jewish Americans have long aligned themselves with liberal causes. More than 75 per cent of U.S. Jews voted Democratic during the November 2018 midterms.



But a struggle over Israel among legislators could come to a head at the 2020 Democratic National Convention, when the platform committee will have to confront thorny questions over criticizing Israel's occupation of the West Bank.


It was like you had this tremendous power forward, but he has a big cocaine problem. But you don't talk about it because he's on your team.— Bernard  Avishai


The rift, Avishai said, "will not just get deeper; I think it's going to get uglier," given Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer's pro-Israel stand and leadership position.



Staunch support for Israel was once a given for both parties, with the Jewish state valued as a democratic pillar of Western interests in the Middle East. What's shifted, Avishai believes, is an erosion of progressive support from Americans disenchanted with what they view as Israel's unethical settlement projects.


It was once understood among politicians that criticizing Israel was a no-go, owing to its prominence "as a strategic asset," he said.


"It was like you had this tremendous power forward, but he has a big cocaine problem. But you don't talk about it because he's on your team."


'Is this exploitable?'




Younger Democratic voices like Omar and Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib have not shied away from challenging Israel. Their denunciations have gone so far as to support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement often criticized as inflaming anti-Semitism.


And New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who decried a May 14 "massacre" of Palestinian protesters by the Israeli Army in Gaza, has been dubbed the future of the Democratic Party.




All of which has prompted political opportunism.




Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez looks at her phone before a lottery for office assignments on Capitol Hill on Nov, 30, 2018. She criticized a May 14 'massacre' of Palestinian protesters by the Israeli Army in Gaza. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)


"Is this exploitable by the Republicans? You bet it is," said Alvin Rosenfeld, director of the Institute for the Study of Contemporary Anti-Semitism at Indiana University.



On Tuesday, U.S. President Donald Trump called for Omar's resignation for her remarks, which he claimed were "deep-seated in her heart."



House minority leader Kevin McCarthy denounced Omar, despite a number of his fellow Republicans — among them Iowa Rep. Steve King, Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, and McCarthy himself — being accused of endorsing racist and anti-Semitic sentiments in the past.



"What the Republicans recognize," Rosenfeld said, "is that some radical voices within the Democratic Party today are giving them an opportunity to say that it's Republicans, far more than Democrats, who will continue to maintain strong American-Israeli relationships."


'Unprecedented polarization' over Israel



In moves that pleased Israel, the Trump administration has relocated the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv, withdrawn from the Iran nuclear deal and cut aid for Palestinian refugees.


Meanwhile, the Israeli government has tightened its embrace of Trump. Last week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's re-election campaign unfurled giant billboards of the two leaders shaking hands.



"We're now seeing unprecedented polarization over the issue of Israel," said David Schraub, a lecturer in law at the University of California Berkeley who writes on racism and anti-Semitism.



An election campaign billboard in Jerusalem shows Netanyahu and Trump shaking hands. In Hebrew, the billboard reads: 'Netanyahu is a different league.' Israel will hold elections on April. 9. (Oded Balilty/Associated Press)



Democrats have not forgotten Netanyahu's all-but-official endorsement of Republican Mitt Romney in the 2012 presidential election, he said. The Obama administration's push for the Iran nuclear deal drove another wedge between the U.S. and Israel.



"On the one hand," Schraub said, an Israeli party has "aligned itself with an explicitly conservative" agenda. "And on the flip side, you've got Democrats saying, 'Why should I expend any energy backing this horse that's so clearly aligned with Republican priorities?'"




Scholars argue that criticizing lobbying money and Israel, just like criticism of any state, can be legitimate, so long as it doesn't come to outright demonization. Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders, who is Jewish and spent time on a kibbutz in the 1960s, has been feted for blasting what he calls human-rights abuses by Israel against Palestinians.


Not just newcomers



Indeed, it isn't just freshmen Democratic members challenging longtime support for the Jewish state.



While Tlaib and Omar are the only two House members who openly support the BDS movement, six Democratic hopefuls and declared presidential candidates for 2020 — Cory Booker, Kamala Harris, Elizabeth Warren, Kirsten Gillibrand, Sanders and Sherrod Brown — voted against an "anti-BDS" bill in the Senate last week.


The bill, which passed 77-23, would allow states in the U.S. to sanction firms that give in to boycotts of Israel. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota was the only Democratic presidential hopeful to vote yes on the bill.



Several of the Democratic dissenters reasoned that the anti-boycott element in the bill raised free-speech concerns. 



Sen. Bernie Sanders speaks during a Senate committee hearing in 2017. Sanders has criticized what he calls human-rights abuses by Israel against Palestinians. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)



Openness to criticizing Israel might be in line with grassroots opinions. Recent polling suggests more Americans are increasingly becoming critical of the Jewish state, despite broad support overall.



"It used to be that there was only a narrow gap between Republicans and Democrats on Israel," said Shibley Telhami, who has been studying American attitudes about the Middle East for more than 30 years and directs the University of Maryland Critical Issues Poll.



"That gap has widened dramatically, with Republicans wanting the U.S. to take Israel's side, and the majority of Democrats wanting the U.S. to be more even-handed."



The Democratic public, he added, "is not opposed to harsher measures and sanctions" against Israel over construction of settlements. According to a poll conducted last October, most Democrats (56 per cent) said they wanted the U.S. to impose sanctions or take more serious action over settlements. Only 26 per cent of Republican voters felt that way.




To an extent, Telhami said, the data suggests "those younger members seem to be supported by Democratic public opinion."



House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer listen on Capitol Hill during an event advocating a $15 minimum wage, on Jan. 16. Pelosi's challenge will be to rein in the freshman Democratic class without discouraging a base that wants to disrupt the status quo, said Rachel Gorlin, a Boston-based Democratic operative. (J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press)



The challenge for Pelosi will be to rein in the freshman Democratic class, which has been good for turnout and energizing the electorate, without discouraging a base that wants to disrupt the status quo, said Rachel Gorlin, a Boston-based Democratic operative.



The Republicans are "absolutely desperate" to divide the Democrats ahead of 2020, Gorlin said.


"These other members are being looked to for comment and for policy suggestions that frankly, they're maybe just barely up to speed on," she said.


Gorlin was careful not to overstate the broader political influence of a handful of Democratic freshmen who have a knack for being provocative on social media.



"These are rookie mistakes. Only, they're getting serious policy attention," she said. "And I don't think we should confuse this controversy over one member's tweet with a serious discussion about the Israeli-Palestinian relations."