California Democratic Party Leadership
Capitulates to Zionist Pressure, Watering Down Resolutions About
Palestinian Rights
By James J
Zogby
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
June 10, 2019
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California Democratic Party Convention, June 2, 2019 |
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The Continuing Struggle for Palestinian Rights Among
California Democrats
It was back in the mid-1980's that Jack O'Dell, a long-time advisor
first to Martin Luther King Jr. and then to Jesse Jackson, taught me a
lesson I never forgot. The gist of his advice was that when struggling
against adversaries to secure your rights, never be devastated by
setbacks and never become overly confident after feeling you've made
progress.
What prompted this advice were a few incidents that
occurred in the early 1980's. In the lead up to the 20th anniversary of
Martin Luther King-led 1963 "March on Washington," the organizers of the
commemorative event invited the participation of Arab Americans, through
our organization, the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC).
Our chairman, former Senator James Abourezk, was asked to serve on the
National Steering Committee and invited to speak at the event, and I was
asked to serve on the National Planning Council. On learning of this,
major American Jewish organizations protested and threatened to withdraw
their support and involvement in the event. They objected to our
participation and to Abourezk's speaking role. After weeks of heated
exchanges, we won. Arab Americans marched and our chairman's role was
secured on the steering committee and as a speaker.
Later that
same year, Jesse Jackson announced his candidacy for president of the
United States and appointed me as a deputy campaign manager. Early in
campaign, a group of liberal American Jewish leaders requested a meeting
with Jackson to express their concerns both with his expanded outreach
to the Arab American community and the fact that he had brought me on
board. The meeting took place, they raised their objections, and Jackson
rejected their concerns.
Throughout this entire ordeal, I sought
support from Jack O'Dell and his advice as to how best to weather these
storms. When I had first learned of their objections to my being in the
campaign, I was so frustrated at having to go through much the same
fight we had just gone through over our involvement in the 20th
anniversary march, I told both Jackson and O'Dell that I felt like
quitting. Their response was "if you quit, you give your adversaries
exactly what they want. What they fear most is that you'll stick around
and fight." Then, after my role in the campaign was affirmed by Jackson,
I told Jack O'Dell how good it felt to win. He offered another piece of
advice – a cautionary note. When you think you're winning, he said,
don't turn your back, because your adversaries haven't given up. They'll
come after you again.
I've carried these words wisdom with me
throughout my political career and it has helped carry me through many
political storms. I thought about O'Dell's lessons after learning about
developments at last week's California Democratic Convention.
Last week's California Democratic Convention
In the lead up to the convention, a group of Arab American and
progressive Jewish Democrats prepared five resolutions on various
aspects of Palestinian rights and the path to an Israeli-Palestinian
peace. Buoyed by polls demonstrating the extent to which attitudes among
rank and file Democrats had shifted on the question of Palestine, their
resolutions: condemned recent actions by the Trump Administration (aid
cuts, moving the US Embassy to Jerusalem, turning a blind eye to
Netanyahu's settlement expansion); called for the Palestinian right of
return; condemned Israel's Jewish Nation-State Law; criticized equating
criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism; and called for an end to the
blockade of Gaza.
After protests from a number of major
American Jewish organizations, the California Democratic Party
leadership undertook to blunt the criticism by rewriting and "watering
down" the resolutions and, in violation of the party's own rules,
refused to allow the original resolution language to be brought to a
vote. The Jewish press crowed that the party "Rejects Resolutions
Critical of Israel." And members of the Arab American and Progressive
caucuses who had drafted the original language were justifiably
frustrated by having been steamrolled by the party leadership. Some saw
the entire enterprise as a loss.
But on closer examination, a
different picture emerges. On the one hand, the fact that the pro-Israel
groups and the party leaders had to resort to heavy-handed tactics to
sideline the original resolutions and feared losing if they had allowed
them to come to a vote by the membership, they only served to expose the
weakness of their position. At the same time, on closer examination,
while the rewritten resolutions struck language they found objectionable
(for example, "the right to return" or the language about anti-Semitism)
and included more pro-Israel language, they also felt obliged to
maintain significant parts of the Arab American/Progressive resolutions.
The rewritten resolutions, for example, criticize the "premature" US
Embassy move to Jerusalem, call for a reinstatement of US aid to UNWRA
for "Palestinians who became refugees as a result of Israel's
establishment," criticize the "expansion of illegal settlements in the
West Bank and East Jerusalem," support "human rights, equality, and
justice" in Israel and Palestine, and call for ending the blockade of
Gaza.
I was pleased to learn that Arab American and progressive
activists who led this effort, though frustrated, are resolved to
continue their struggle. These activists are right not to quit. They've
made real progress. Far from losing, they forced a debate on critical
issues of justice and peace, and forced the leadership to include
language in their "rewritten" resolutions that otherwise would not have
appeared. Understanding both the progress that's been made and the fact
that efforts to secure justice must continue, because adversaries won't
be giving up either, are important lessons to carry to the next round.
https://www.aaiusa.org/the_continuing_struggle_for_palestinian_rights_among_california_democrats
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