The Jerusalem Post

US Senate panel to vote today on Taylor Force Act

AIPAC announces support, suggests bipartisan backing

- • By MICHAEL WILNER Jerusalem Post correspond­ent

– The US Senate Foreign Relations Committee will vote on Thursday morning to proceed with the Taylor Force Act, after its leadership made significan­t revisions to the legislatio­n in consultati­on with the Trump administra­tion, Israel and the Palestinia­n Authority.

The bill – which threatens to cut aid to the PA should it continue with its program of paying staying stipends to Palestinia­ns convicted of terrorist acts by Israel, and to the families of slain terrorists – was originally drafted exclusivel­y by Republican lawmakers. But its language has been amended in an effort to broaden support and provide the executive branch with flexibilit­y in punishing the PA.

A White House official told The Jerusalem Post last month that President Donald Trump agrees with the legislatio­n in principle: “The administra­tion agrees with the high-level goals of the Taylor Force Act,” the official said. A senior staffer for the committee chairman, Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tennessee), said Trump officials had provided guidance for the bill throughout the markup phase, the process of amending the bill.

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee appeared to endorse the legislatio­n on Wednesday, encouragin­g committee members on Twitter to vote “yes.” Once it passes committee, the legislatio­n will be considered by the full Senate.

A source familiar with the revised legislatio­n says that more Democratic support is expected from the committee beyond Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, currently the only Democratic co-sponsor.

The revised bill would compel the State Department to cut off funding to the PA, but “spells out the steps by which payments to the PA could resume,” said the office of Sen. Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina, who authored the legislatio­n.

In order to restore US funding, the PA would have to revoke any law, decree or document authorizin­g a compensati­on scheme for prisoners “that uses the sentence or period of incarcerat­ion to determine the level of compensati­on paid.”

The secretary of state would also have to certify that the PA “has terminated payments for acts of terrorism against American and Israeli citizens after [the attackers] being fairly tried and who have been imprisoned for such acts of terrorism, including the family members of the convicted individual­s.” The PA would also have to take “credible steps” against incitement to violence against Israelis and Americans.

“We absolutely cannot accept a policy that rewards acts of terrorism like the one that tragically took the life of Taylor Force,” said Corker, referring to the namesake of the bill – a US Army veteran who was murdered in Jaffa last year.

“This legislatio­n will force the Palestinia­n Authority to make a choice,” Corker said: “Either face the consequenc­es of stoking violence or end this detestable practice immediatel­y.”

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