‘Uncommitted’ voters could back Harris if Israel-Gaza stance shifts, say delegates
Pro-Palestinian Democrats were the only Michigan delegates who voted against endorsing Vice President Kamala Harris this week, but they say they’d be willing to reconsider if Harris shifts the administration’s Gaza policies.
State of play: One of the two “no” votes, Abbas Alawieh, told Axios the national uncommitted movement has been trying to schedule a meeting with the vice president to discuss how to win back support of anti-war Democratic voters.
- If Harris meaningfully engages with demands of a ceasefire that also achieves the release of all hostages, “Our uncommitted national movement will do everything in our power to mobilize the 730,000 people who voted uncommitted to vote for Vice President Harris,” he tells Axios.
- “We do not make this offer lightly. We make it sincerely, knowing how dangerous Donald Trump is.”
Between the lines: Harris’ public statements on the Israel-Hamas war haven’t differed from those of President Biden, but she doesn’t own Biden’s career-long pro-Israel stance.
- Biden is known as one of the most pro-Israel members of Congress in history.
Friction point: The uncommitted delegates’ persistence has caused intraparty strife for Michigan Democrats. Alawieh says he was told to “shut up, a–hole” by another Democratic Party delegate while advocating for a more humane Gaza policy during the virtual vote Tuesday.
- “To have Democratic elected officials in the state on the call and not a single one speak up and say, ‘Hey, Abbas is one of us, or ‘Uncommitted voters matter to us.’ It was a slap in the face,” Alawieh tells Axios.
- “The disrespect shown to a member of our delegation tonight was disappointing and unacceptable,” chair Lavora Barnes wrote in an email following the meeting.
Kamala Harris said she pressed Benjamin Netanyahu about her concerns about the humanitarian situation in Gaza in “frank” talks in Washington that are being closely watched for indications of how she might deal with Israel if she becomes president.
After speaking to the Israeli prime minister she said:
Israel has a right to defend itself. And how it does so matters. I made clear my serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation there [in Gaza]. I will not be silent.
Harris’s remarks, which were sharp and serious in tone, reflected what could be a shift from President Joe Biden in how she deals with Netanyahu, Reuters reported.