The Guardian (USA)

Pro-Israel groups denounced after pouring funds into primary race

- Chris McGreal

Hawkish pro-Israel lobby groups have been accused of using Republican mega-donors to hijack Democratic primaries after the “alarming” defeat of a prominent Jewish congressma­n because he criticised Israel’s treatment of the Palestinia­ns.

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) spent more than $4m to defeat Andy Levin in Tuesday’s Democratic primary for a congressio­nal seat in north-western Detroit.

Levin, who comes from a distinguis­hed political dynasty, including his father and an uncle who served long stints as Democrats in Congress, said he had been “the target of a largely

Republican-funded campaign” because he dissented from Aipac’s support for hardline Israeli policies.

Aipac poured funds into supporting Levin’s opponent, Haley Stevens, who won with about 60% of the vote. The lobby group heralded her victory as evidence that “being pro-Israel is both good policy and good politics”. But critics noted that much of Aipac’s spending was on negative campaignin­g against Levin that did not mention Israel.

Levin was backed by the more liberal pro-Israel group, J Street. It contrasted Aipac’s endorsemen­t of more than 100 Republican members of Congress who voted against certifying Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election victory with the “onslaught of rightwing outside spending and baseless smears” to defeat a progressiv­e candidate with a history of supporting unions and civil rights.

Aipac, through its political action committee, the United Democracy Project, has raised millions of dollars from Republican billionair­es such as the Trump campaign funders Paul

Singer and Bernie Marcus to defeat candidates not considered pro-Israel enough.

Other pro-Israel groups, such as the Democratic Majority for Israel and ProIsrael America, have also spent heavily to oppose candidates regarded as antiIsrael in Democratic primaries from Texas to Ohio and California.

“This aggressive interventi­on in Democratic primaries – by a group funded in part by Republican megadonors – to promote an unpopular agenda is harmful to American foreign policy, to the Democratic party and ultimately to the State of Israel,” said J Street, which is more critical of Israeli policies that perpetuate domination of the Palestinia­ns.

In an interview with the Guardian during the campaign, Levin warned that Aipac’s involvemen­t raised the specter of the entire primary process being hijacked by well-funded lobbies such as big oil and the gun industry.

“I don’t think the Democratic party can really stand for it and maintain the integrity of our own elections,” he said.

After his defeat, Levin said he “will continue to speak out against the corrosive influence of dark money on our democracy”.

J Street has called on Democratic candidates to decline Aipac’s support, saying that it is intended to warn politician­s against criticism of Israel’s actions or risk a well-funded campaign against them.

“With their overwhelmi­ng spending, Aipac hopes to send an intimidati­ng message to others: cross our red lines, and you could be next. While political space for open and healthy debate over US foreign policy has opened up considerab­ly in recent years, they appear determined to close it down,” it said.

Aipac has poured more than $24m into defeating Democratic primary candidates critical of Israel. Last month it celebrated defeating former congresswo­man Donna Edwards, who was the favorite to win a Maryland seat until the UDP spent $7m to unleash an advertisin­g blitz against her.

But Aipac suffered an unusual setback on Tuesday in another Detroit seat where it spent heavily to defeat a member of the Michigan state legislatur­e, Shri Thanedar, who has strongly criticised the Israeli occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s.

Thanedar, an Indian immigrant and wealthy entreprene­ur, beat state senator Adam Hollier, who is Black and strongly pro-Israel, in a field fractured between several candidates in the majority African American district.

Some of Aipac’s supporters have suggested that the focus on Aipac’s funding of campaigns against candidates critical of Israeli government policies is antisemiti­c because the group is doing no more than other lobby organisati­ons.

In response, Lara Friedman, president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, tweeted: “So AIPAC can do it … & AIPAC can brag about doing it … But talking about what AIPAC did (at least in a critical way) is antisemiti­c. See how that works?

 ?? Enough. Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA ?? Aipac, through its political action committee, has raised millions of dollars from Republican billionair­es to defeat candidates not considered pro-Israel
Enough. Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA Aipac, through its political action committee, has raised millions of dollars from Republican billionair­es to defeat candidates not considered pro-Israel

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