Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

AIPAC reschedules congressional trips to Israel over rising COVID concerns

The House Republican freshman trip and a bipartisan delegation of members of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees will be now rescheduled for February.

AIPAC
A view of the 2019 AIPAC Policy Conference proceedings in Washington, D.C. Source: AIPAC via Twitter.

The American Israel Education Foundation, the charitable organization affiliated with AIPAC, is rescheduling two congressional trips to Israel next month over concerns tied to COVID-19.

The House Republican freshman trip and a bipartisan delegation of members of the House Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees, originally scheduled for August, are now planned for February. These two delegations will now coincide with the Democratic freshman trip, which had already been planned for February 2022.

“AIEF has decided to reschedule to a later date two congressional trips to Israel that were slated for August. Given Israel’s increased concern over the Delta variant and the likelihood of further travel restrictions, we decided it was not possible to offer Members of Congress a comprehensive and informative program in the midst of the current challenges,” Marshall Wittmann, spokesman for AIPAC, told JNS.

“Enthusiasm for traveling to Israel remains high among these members, and we look forward to them visiting Israel with AIEF,” he said.

AIPAC recently also announced that it is going to cancel its 2022 policy conference, also due to concerns about the spread of COVID.

Israel, like many other countries, has seen rising caseloads in recent weeks as the result of the new variants spreading in the country.

Clalit study finds hospital-level care at home can improve outcomes as wartime pressures reshape patient treatment.
Liz Berney, of ZOA, told JNS that the organization is “pleased that the Supreme Court and the appellate court properly dismissed this baseless case outright.”
“The meeting went very well,” the president wrote. “The United States is going to work with Lebanon in order to help it protect itself from Hezbollah.”
“Missouri stands with Israel and its people and we want to make sure that the world understands that,” the governor said while signing the bill.
“Academic freedom does not include platforming terrorists,” the LawFare Project stated, calling the event “institutional normalization of terrorism.”
Kimberly Richey, assistant secretary for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Education, stated that “no child should be taught by his or her teachers to hate their peers.”