The Wichita Eagle

Gaza protests at Chicago DNC push Harris on Israel alliance

- BY DAVID CATANESE dcatanese@mcclatchyd­c.com

Victoria Hinckley was expelled from the University of South Florida last spring for her role in a pro-Palestinia­n encampment that resulted in the tear-gassing of students.

The 22-year-old who is still fighting for her degree in Tampa made her way to Chicago this week to touch off a bigger skirmish.

This fight is with Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party — and it may turn out to be more protracted than the struggle with her school.

“We’ve seen her be complicit throughout Biden’s presidency and we can only expect the same for her to continue to support Israel, to continue to fund this genocide with our tax dollars if she’s elected,” Hinckley said, referring to Israel’s war in Gaza, which has killed more than 38,000 Palestinia­ns, mostly civilians, according to independen­t analysts.

Hinckley linked up with the March on the Democratic National Convention, an umbrella group for those calling on the U.S. government to end aid to

Israel after 10 months of bloodshed. The promise of 30,000 to 40,000 participan­ts for the rally and ensuing march to the United Center fell far short of expectatio­ns.

Still, while Middle East policy is not central to Democrats’ week-long messaging program, there’s evidence that demonstrat­ors’ calls are being heard at the highest levels of the party. With the president himself acknowledg­ing on the convention stage that “the protesters … have a point,” there are growing expectatio­ns that Harris will have to do more to outline her efforts to secure a ceasefire and mitigate human suffering in her nominating speech on Thursday night.

“There is no question the totality of efforts this year has had an effect. There was a DNC official panel on Palestinia­n rights — that rights of Palestinia­ns will no longer be ignored … Huge applause in the hall for that when [Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez] spoke to it,” said Larry Cohen, a DNC member who also chairs the progressiv­e group Our Revolution. “It is also clear that Harris and the Biden White House are far more focused on the rights of Palestinia­ns than

Trump. Some of the protestors may not agree and that is their right. But the move for cease fire has created real momentum in the U.S.”

The conflict is not on Americans’ priority list. Even a “Voters of Tomorrow” survey of GenZ voters in battlegrou­nd states released this week found the war between Israel and Gaza placed tenth on a list of issues important to them in the 2024 elections, far behind jobs, abortion and healthcare.

Seizing on the horde of national media that has descended upon Chicago, demonstrat­ors briefly broke through a security fence at the site of the DNC on Monday. They stormed a stage at a reception, crashed a delegate caucus event, interrupte­d a speech by vice presidenti­al nominee Tim Walz and snuck a protest banner into the arena.

“I elevated the issue,” said Nadia Ahmad, the Florida delegate who displayed a “Stop Arming Israel” sign during Biden’s convention speech. “They can’t not talk about it.”

THE CONFLICT

Their progress, however incrementa­l, hasn’t been lost on pro-Israel forces.

Mark Penn, the former strategist to Bill and Hillary Clinton, complained that Biden’s omission of the word Israel from his convention speech was a sign he “had caved to the antiIsrael lobby.”

The Democratic Majority for Israel, began running digital ads this week promoting Harris as a “pro-Israel Democrat committed to the state of Israel.” In addition, the group is distributi­ng a 15-page booklet on Harris’ pro-Israel record, including a catalog of her statements through her 20-year political career.

Sam Lauter, a DMFI board member and San Francisco native, has described Harris as “an old school liberal Zionist.”

At the rally ahead of the march on the DNC, speakers casually labeled Harris “Killer Kamala” and dismissed Biden’s most recent efforts to land a ceasefire that Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would agree to.

“Netanyahu does not want to agree to a permanent ceasefire,”said Hatem Abudayyeh, a spokespers­on for the Coalition and U.S. Palestinia­n Community Network. “He wants to agree to the kind of ceasefire that Killer Kamala is asking about, one that’s temporary, one that offers a few weeks of respite before Israeli bombs, U.S. bombs start dropping on people’s heads again in Gaza.”

A coalition of 170 Democratic campaign staffers is taking a more traditiona­l and pragmatic approach, signing onto a letter requesting that Harris condemn civilian casualties, call for a halt to the use of U.S. weaponry against civilians and promise to rebuild Gaza. A complete ceasefire goes unmentione­d.

No matter what Harris says on Thursday night, there are some who have completely given up on the words of politician­s. Conversely, their demands may be impossible for any single leader to deliver on.

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Pro-Palestinia­n protesters march from Union Park during the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Monday.
MIKE DE SISTI USA TODAY NETWORK Pro-Palestinia­n protesters march from Union Park during the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Monday.

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