23 October 2019
Americans overwhelmingly
reject laws designed to penalize supporters of BDS – the boycott, divestment
and sanctions movement for Palestinian rights, according to a new
poll.
More than 70 percent of
respondents oppose laws that target BDS activism as an infringement on the
constitutional right to free speech.
That opposition rises to 80
percent among Democrats but is still remarkably high among Republicans, at 62
percent.
With the encouragement of
Israel and its lobby groups, 27 US states have
adopted anti-BDS
laws.
Similar measures pending in
Congress face strong
opposition from civil liberties groups.
The University of Maryland
Critical Issues poll asked a representative sample of more than 3,000 Americans
in September about their attitudes towards Middle East issues.
Among respondents, about half
had heard something about BDS.
Of those, 26 percent support
BDS. Another 26 percent neither supports or opposes it.
Meanwhile, 47 percent – fewer
than half – say they oppose BDS.
Following recent trends, there
is strong party polarization: Just 8 percent of Republicans support BDS
compared with 48 percent of Democrats.
Just 15 percent of Democrats
oppose BDS, according to the poll.
Confirming that the boycott
message is reaching the party’s progressive base, 77 percent of the Democrats
who have heard of the movement agreed that BDS “is a legitimate, peaceful way
of opposing Israeli occupation of the Palestinian territories.”
Only 19 percent of the
Democrats agreed with the statement – typical of Israeli government claims –
that BDS is an “anti-Israel organization attempting to weaken Israel and to
undermine its legitimacy,” and that some of its supporters are anti-Semitic.
Positions were reversed among
Republicans, with just 13 percent agreeing that BDS is legitimate and 85
percent viewing it as “anti-Israel.”
This poll confirms long-term
trends where support for Palestinian rights is gaining strength in the
base of the Democratic Party.
This is playing out in the
ongoing primary campaign.
Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar –
who polls between
one and two percent – faced stinging criticism from progressives for calling Israel
“a beacon of democracy” during last week’s televised debate.
Such unquestioning praise of
Israel had until recent years been standard fare for ambitious politicians of
either main party.
But the leading Democrats are
heading in the other direction.
Senator Elizabeth Warren said
this week for the first time that reducing aid to Israel would be “on
the table” if Israel did not stop building settlements on occupied Palestinian
land – a war
crime.
Warren has for years been
loath to make any commitment to holding Israel accountable.
Pete Buttigieg,
the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, did not go as far.
Answering a question at the
University of Chicago over the weekend, he said,
“I think that the aid is leverage to guide Israel in the right direction.”
But he suggested that as
president he would only reduce aid if Israel proceeded with formal annexation
of settlements.
Until this week, Vermont
Senator Bernie
Sanders has been the only
major candidate seeking the Democratic nomination to state clearly
that he would withhold military aid from Israel.
Former Senator Mike Gravel,
who dropped out of the race in August, had pledged to end military aid to
Israel.
No comments:
Post a Comment