Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Protests Target Netanyahu’s Speech in US Congress

A new coalition of advocacy groups is urging U.S. lawmakers to skip Netanyahu’s speech in Washington, where protesters are planning demonstrations against the Israeli leader and the genocide in Gaza.

Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuthe World Economic Forum in Davos, January 2018. (World Economic Forum, Flickr, Manuel Lopez, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

By Brett Wilkins
Common Dreams

Pressure is mounting on U.S. lawmakers to skip Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s scheduled address to Congress Wednesday, after a newly formed coalition of civil society groups announced a protest against the far-right leader— whose policies and actions in Gaza are on trial for genocide at the World Court.

As Netanyahu “brings to Congress his message of extending and expanding the devastating war in Gaza, neglecting the safety of Israeli hostages, and ensuring impunity for the actions of his government, an alternative message must be heard,” the new coalition said in a statement Monday.

“To amplify a message of safety, freedom, just peace, collective liberation, and human rights for ALL Palestinians and Israelis, nine diverse groups have come together to form the Peace and Justice Protest Bloc,” it said.

The groups — American Friends of Combatants for Peace (AFCFP), Win Without War, T’ruah, Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom, Israelis for Peace, Halachic Left, and three local chapters of Supporters of Standing Together — “will come together in Washington this week to urge members of Congress to skip Netanyahu’s speech, sponsor community events with peace activists from the region, and amplify the voices of those in IsraelPalestine, and around the world who reject Netanyahu’s failed leadership.”

“The bloc, made up of hundreds of Israelis, Palestinians, Arabs, Jews, and allies, will unite to demonstrate that collective struggle and liberation are possible, and there is a growing movement that embodies it,” the coalition added. “We must act now to ensure that the voices for a just peace are louder than those of division and bloodshed.”

A larger protest by a coalition of groups including Palestinian Youth Movement, National Students for Justice in Palestine, CodePink, ANSWER Coalition, the People’s Forum, International Peoples’ Assembly, Al-Awda-N.Y., and the Palestinian American Community Center-N.J. is also planned for Wednesday, when Netanyahu is set to speak.

Organizers are planning to surround the U.S. Capitol.

“A visit by Netanyahu to Congress and the U.S. confirms something we already knew: The United States of America financially and morally supports the slaughter of Palestinians happening in Gaza,” said CodePink Palestine campaign coordinator Nour Jaghama, who was arrested outside the Republican National Convention last week after being falsely accused of assaulting a Republican lawmaker. “They are no better than Netanyahu and every single Israeli official who orders the dropping of bombs on sieges on hospitals.” 

Groups including the Council on American Islamic Relations and CodePink have circulated petitions urging members of Congress to boycott Netanyahu’s speech, which is set for Wednesday.

Numerous congressional Democrats have already said they will not attend the address, as has Independent U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who on Monday reaffirmed why he’ll skip the speech.

“Netanyahu and his right-wing, extremist government have waged total war against the Palestinian people, killing at least 39,000 Palestinians and injuring 89,000 — 60 percent of whom are women, children, or elderly people,” Sanders said. “Netanyahu should not be welcomed into the United States Congress.”

“On the contrary, his policies in Gaza and the West Bank and his refusal to support a two-state solution should be roundly condemned,” the senator added. “In my view, his right-wing, extremist government should not receive another nickel of U.S. taxpayer support to continue the inhumane destruction of Gaza.”

Axios Capitol Hill reporter Juliegrace Brufke said Monday that Vice President Kamala Harris — whom many Democrats have endorsed for president since U.S. President Joe Biden’s Sunday withdrawal from the 2024 race — has “declined” to preside over Netanyahu’s speech, as is her prerogative as Senate president. So has Senate President Pro Tempore Patty Murray (D-WA), leaving uncertainty as to who will preside over the session.

Like Biden, Harris has been an ardent supporter of Israel during her tenure in the U.S. Senate and White House. She is facing fresh calls take a “clear stance” against any more weapons sales for Israel.

In 2015 — the last time Netanyahu addressed Congress — nearly 60 lawmakers including Sanders boycotted his speech.

Some progressive groups and individuals have called for more than just a boycott of Netanyahu.

The Center for Constitutional Rights on Friday asked the U.S. Justice Department to investigate Netanyahu and other Israeli officials for allegedly committing or authorizing genocide, war crimes, and torture.

The group led a federal genocide complicity lawsuit against Biden, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin that was dismissed last week.

Last month, former Democratic Ohio state Sen. Nina Turner argued that Netanyahu “should be arrested on the spot” for “overseeing a genocide.”

Meanwhile, U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) warned attendees of the Republican National Convention event last week that he would order the arrest of any lawmakers who get “out of hand” during Netanyahu’s speech.

Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.

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