Sunday, 17 April 2016
Sanders’s Israel criticism splits Jewish American vote
When Bernie Sanders called Israel’s response in the 2014 Gaza war
disproportionate and urged America to be more balanced on the Israeli-
Palestinian conflict, he smashed a presidential campaign taboo.
His remarks at the April 14 Democratic debate ahead of New York’s
decisive primary on Tuesday amounted to unprecedented criticism of
Israel and promotion of Palestinian rights from a canvassing US
presidential candidate.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “is not right all of the time,”
said the Vermont senator. “We cannot continue to be one-sided.”
He criticized Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton for not saying that
she would do more to promote Palestinian rights when she addressed the
powerful right-wing American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)
lobby in Washington in March.
“If we are ever going to bring peace to that region, which has seen so
much hatred and so much war, we are going to have to treat the
Palestinian people with respect and dignity,” Sanders said.
Sanders, who is the only Jewish presidential hopeful this year, has lived in
Israel.
In other countries the remarks would have been considered run of the mill,
said Daniel Sieradski, national organizer of the group “Jews for Bernie”
which has 8,000 supporters on Facebook.
“But because the discourse in American Jewish politics has been pulled so
far to the right in the last couple of decades, Bernie is being made to
sound like some anti-Israel extremist.”
During the last contested Democratic New York primary in 1992, it might
have been political suicide, The New York Times wrote.
Sieradski disagreed. “I don’t think it’s political suicide,” he told AFP.
“But it definitely didn’t help him among people who have hard-line views
on Israel.”
– “Breath of fresh air” –
He said Jewish Americans make up 20 percent of the New York electorate.
The majority of them are Democrats, meaning that air-tight support for
Israel has long been considered a campaign must.
But Sanders’ words reflect changing attitudes among Jewish voters,
particularly Millennials who grew up seeing Israel as a strong state and
for whom the horrors of the Holocaust are more removed.
Democrat Sharon Goldtzvik, 29, told AFP she was “really excited” to see
a presidential candidate bring up the issue of Palestinian dignity.
She founded and runs Uprise, a communications firm which works with
non-profit groups and focuses on human rights and the Middle East.
Goldtzvik has lived in Israel, is married to an Israeli, and describes
Sanders as “a breath of fresh air.”
“I’m under 30. People in my cohort were not willing to accept (that) there
is only one way to support Israel, so I do think that he represents the views
of many, many Jews and a growing number of Jews.”
According to a Pew Research Center poll, 35 percent of Democrats
thought Israel had gone too far in its response during the 2014 Gaza.
Sanders has “at least opened up the discourse so the conversation can shift
in the Democratic Party, and that’s a big deal,” said Sieradski.
Polls show that Sanders trails Clinton 40-60 percent among Jewish
Democrats in New York City, and 13 points behind his opponent on a
state-wide average.
– “Losing anyway” –
Documentary filmmaker Gaylen Ross is voting for Clinton and believes
she is the candidate best able to negotiate a two-state solution.
“Frankly if that’s the kind of language that he comes to a negotiating table
with he is already 10 steps behind,” she told AFP.
“You don’t play your hand before you get to the table and you don’t play
your hand before you get to a national election.”
Sanders’ suspension of his Jewish outreach director for referring to
Netanyahu in vulgar terms also signals a lack of experience or suggests he
is not informed, Ross said.
Sanders was the only the candidate who declined to speak at the AIPAC
event in Washington on March 21. He also told the New York Daily News
— mistakenly — that he thought more than 10,000 civilians were killed in
Gaza in 2014.
Howard Graubard, a New York lawyer active in Democratic politics in the
state, does not expect Sanders to suffer much at the ballot box “because he
was going to lose anyway.”
It won’t alienate his progressive Jewish supporters, but his criticism of
Israel gives Orthodox and right-wing Zionist Democrats, who feel little
enthusiasm for Clinton, a reason to get out and vote.
“They’re nominal Democrats and need a motivator,” Graubard said.
“People are being emailed, fliers will be going up this weekend, there will
be phone banks, and the message about Bernie and Israel is going out to
pull those people out to vote.”
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