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Inside the DNC’s Middle East (not) working group

POLITICO PoliticsApr 105 min readOriginal source →
Inside the DNC’s Middle East (not) working group

TL;DR

The DNC's Middle East working group, formed to address internal divisions on Israel, is struggling to find common ground after seven months. The group has met twice in person and twice virtually but faces challenges in productive discussions due to ideological divides and scheduling conflicts.

Key points

  • DNC formed a Middle East working group to address internal divisions
  • The group has met in person and virtually over seven months
  • Members have backgrounds in Jewish and Palestinian advocacy
  • Challenges include scheduling conflicts and ideological divides
  • Discussions focus on finding solutions for the party

Mentioned in this story

Democratic National CommitteeKen MartinSteph NewtonJames Zogby

Why it matters

The DNC's ability to address its internal divisions on Israel is crucial for party unity and future electoral success.

After the Democratic National Committee punted on two resolutions in August that highlighted the party’s deep divide on Israel, DNC Chair Ken Martin convened a task force “to have the conversation” and “bring solutions back to our party.”

Seven months later, the Middle East working group — meeting today in-person for the second time — still has work to do.

The group, composed of eight DNC members with backgrounds in Jewish and Palestinian advocacy, has struggled to meet consistently or coalesce around shared objectives. Part of that is due to the difficulties of coordinating across schedules and time zones, with at least one member actively running for office. But atop those hurdles come the challenges of productive discourse about one of the party’s most contentious debates among a cohort with sharp ideological divides.

“People aren’t comfortable with being uncomfortable,” Steph Newton, a DNC member from Oregon who’s part of the working group, told POLITICO. “These uncomfortable discussions are how we’re going to be able to move the party forward and find a solution.”

The working group met for the first time in December at the DNC’s winter meeting in Los Angeles, and convened virtually two more times, on March 1 and March 18. Those meetings mostly centered on figuring out what the group should be working on in the first place. “Most of the time, what we’ve talked about is, ‘What are we supposed to be doing?’” said James Zogby, another member from D.C.

The working group comes as divides over support for Israel remain a persistent liability for Democrats, and as AIPAC’s involvement in midterm primaries presents a new purity test for candidates. “No one gets anywhere by trying to shout the other side of the room — as a matter of fact, I think that would be harmful politics,” Andrew Lachman, another working group member from California, said.

A DNC spokesperson emphasized the group’s goal is to figure out how to talk to voters about the Middle East in a way that ultimately helps the party build coalitions and win elections.

The group’s inaction so far came into sharper focus yesterday at the DNC’s spring meeting in New Orleans, when the party’s resolutions committee considered one brought by Joe Salas, another member of the working group from California, to recognize Palestinian statehood.

“It is necessary for the Democratic National Committee to address the ongoing heinous and illegal acts against the Palestinian people. Some here may say that there is a working group. To that, I say that we are in a midterm year and they are yet to produce any results in a moment where anger has only grown amongst the American people,” said Cameron Landon, VP of the College Democrats of America, who spoke on behalf of Salas.

Salas, who wasn’t at the meeting, submitted the resolution without discussing it with the other members of the Middle East working group, according to Zogby and Newton, who said she was “surprised” to see it in the resolutions packet.

“I would assume that if we’re on a work group together discussing these issues, you say, ‘Hey, work group members, teammates, I want to submit a resolution on X, Y and Z. I know we’re working toward something like this together. Is this something that we can discuss?’” Newton said.

Deborah Cunningham-Skurnik, another member of the group from California, told the resolutions panel yesterday that there were “some parts of it I would like to go bit by bit over with” Salas.

Salas said in an interview ahead of the vote he wouldn’t attend the New Orleans meeting because “I’m just gonna let them have those words and reject them, accept them, modify them, whatever they want to do.” He didn’t respond to further requests for comment about why he didn’t tell the working group he submitted the resolution.

The panel ultimately referred those resolutions back to the working group — with a warning. “As a body, we recommend this going back to the task force,” said Ron Harris, the resolutions committee co-chair. “But then we can put some — I don’t want to say ‘constraints,’ but expectations that we hear back.”

John Verdejo, a DNC member from North Carolina, was more direct. “It can’t just be we have a task force and then the next time we have a DNC meeting, it just comes up again. No, we want to see your progress. You want to have a task force? You want to make the hard changes, have the hard discussions? Then do it,” he said.

Allison Minnerly, another working group member from Florida, said after the snafu that “so long as the party does not prioritize this conversation, you will see what happened today, which is that DNC resolutions committee members have many questions on the inaction and the results of the working group. It’s really clear that this issue will keep coming up at every subsequent DNC meeting until there’s a clear direction, solution, talking points.”

Now that the party has referred the resolutions to the working group, it finally has a clear, near-term objective for its meeting today.

“I actually am pleased that we will now have a very specific charge that we must accomplish in a defined period of time,” Zogby said. “We have not had a defined agenda, and it’s been difficult to get people together. Now we have to get this done, and there’s just no way we can duck it at this point.”

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Q&A

What is the purpose of the DNC's Middle East working group?

The working group aims to address the Democratic National Committee's internal divisions on Israel and find solutions for the party.

Who are the members of the DNC's Middle East working group?

The group consists of eight DNC members with backgrounds in Jewish and Palestinian advocacy.

Why has the DNC's Middle East working group struggled to meet consistently?

The group faces challenges in scheduling due to members' commitments, including at least one member running for office, and ideological divides complicate discussions.

When did the DNC's Middle East working group first meet?

The working group met for the first time in December during the DNC's winter meeting in Los Angeles.

People also ask

  • DNC Middle East working group purpose
  • DNC Israel Palestine resolutions
  • DNC working group member backgrounds
  • DNC working group meeting schedule
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At a glance

  • DNC formed a Middle East working group to address internal divisions
  • The group has met in person and virtually over seven months
  • Members have backgrounds in Jewish and Palestinian advocacy
  • Challenges include scheduling conflicts and ideological divides
  • Discussions focus on finding solutions for the party

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