Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Sanders pledges to ‘leverage’ US funding to ‘end some of that racism’ in Israel

“All that I have ever said on [the Israeli-Palestinian conflict] is that U.S. foreign policy should be even-handed. That’s all—even-handed,” he said in response to a question at a New Hampshire town hall from an activist affiliated with the anti-Israel group IfNotNow.

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). Photo by Michael Vadon via Wikimedia Commons.
U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.). Photo by Michael Vadon via Wikimedia Commons.

U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who is running for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, said on Tuesday that, if elected, he would be even-handed on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and even leverage U.S. funding “to end some of the racism” in Israel.

“All that I have ever said on this issue [the Israeli-Palestinian conflict] is that U.S. foreign policy should be even-handed. That’s all—even-handed,” he said in response to a question at a New Hampshire town hall meeting from an activist affiliated with the anti-Israel group IfNotNow, which has been approaching Democratic candidates as representatives of the Jewish community and asking them about ending the so-called “occupation” of the West Bank.

Sanders continued, saying “we respect Israel. Israel has every right to live in peace and security, but so do the Palestinian people. And as somebody who is proudly Jewish, to be critical of a right-wing Netanyahu government in Israel is not to be anti-Semitic.”

He added that “the United States government gives a whole lot of money to Israel, and I think we can leverage that money to end some of the racism that we have recently seen in Israel.”

IfNotNow then edited the senator’s reply “in a deceptive and misleading manner in a video and press release the organization published shortly thereafter,” omitting “Sanders’ expression of respect for Israel from its press release and his placing blame for the situation on Palestinian leaders, in addition to Israeli officials from both its press and video releases,” according to Democratic Majority for Israel.

“While I disagree with some of Senator Sanders’ remarks today regarding Israel, I’m appalled that IfNotNow, an organization that does not recognize Israel’s right to exist in any borders, deceived the public by selectively editing Sanders’ remarks to conform to their strictly anti-Israel agenda,” said Democratic Majority for Israel president and CEO Mark Mellman. “The group removed Sanders’ accurate assessment that ‘the fault is not all with Israel. You got very poor and corrupt Palestinian leadership’ and omitted Sanders’ statement that ‘we respect Israel’ from a release that was presented as a full accounting of what Sanders said.”

“This is the just the latest example of IfNotNow’s effort to mislead the public and forge a false, anti-Israel narrative. Deceptively editing our political leaders, particularly a potential future president,is a disservice to all Americans,” continued Mellman. “By virtue of their extreme positions and their dishonesty, IfNotNow has forfeited a place in the conversation. They should immediately correct the record and apologize to the American public for their dishonesty.”

Among the targets was a central facility used by Iran’s Defense Ministry to produce key components for ballistic missiles, according to the Israeli military.
Police hunt driver and accomplices after the suspected antisemitic attack.
Five suspects arrested after apparent criminal abduction.
Several other passengers sustained minor injuries.
Hundreds stuck at the airport after authorities in the kingdom halt approvals for some European-operated aircraft.
The Israeli prime minister boasts an enormous nose while the U.S. president is grotesquely fat, appearing to divide between the two the stereotypical appearance of the Jew.