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Voting against genocide: how Gaza defeated the Democratic Establishment
RAMZY BAROUD argues that while Donald Trump’s victory offers no solution, voters’ rejection of US support for Israeli genocide shows the potential for sustained political pressure on the Palestine issue going forward

ARAB and Muslim US voters did not remove Democrats from office, nor did they cost Kamala Harris the Oval Office. They merely sent a strong message that Palestine matters, not only to Arabs and Muslims but to many Americans as well.
 
The ones who cost the Democrats the elections are the Democrats themselves. Their humiliating defeat on November 5 was due largely to their undeniable role in the Israeli war and genocide in Gaza.
 
Peter Beinart put it best in his November 7 op-ed in the New York Times, entitled “Democrats ignored Gaza and brought down their party.”
 
“Israel’s slaughter and starvation of Palestinians — funded by US taxpayers and live-streamed on social media,” according to Beinart, has “triggered one of the greatest surges in progressive activism in a generation.” The writer correctly indicates that the core of this activism was “black Americans and the young.”
 
Undeniably, for the first time in US election history, Palestine has become a domestic US political issue  — a nightmare realisation for those who laboured to maintain US foreign policy in the Middle East as an exclusive Israeli domain.
 
Aside from Arab voters, black voters and voters from other minority groups who prioritised Palestine, many white Americans felt the same way. This claim is particularly important as it suggests that US voters are challenging the identity politics paradigm and are now thinking around common struggles, values and morality.
 
“Democrats may no longer be able to rely on young voters to boost numbers, as Harris appears on track to have the lowest support among voters aged 18-29 in this century,” a report in the Independent noted. Knowing the relatively strong support for Palestine among young Americans, US politicians have much to worry about in coming elections.
 
We already know that support for Palestine is overwhelmingly strong among young Democrats. A poll conducted by Gallup in March 2023 indicated that, for the first time, Democrats’ “sympathies ... now lie more with the Palestinians than the Israelis, 49 per cent versus 38 per cent.”
 
Even more astonishing, the overall US Democratic constituency is more pro-Palestine than Israel. According to a poll conducted by the Pew Research Centre last April, the overall young US population “are more likely to sympathise with the Palestinian people than the Israeli people.” While a third of adults under 30 sympathised “entirely or mostly” with Palestinians, only 14 per cent sympathised with the Israelis.
 
These numbers did not seem to matter to the Democrats, who continued to take for granted the votes of youth and other minority groups. They made a grave mistake.
 
The Biden Administration has played a central role in funding and sustaining the Israeli war machine, thus facilitating the Israeli genocide in Gaza. Millions of Americans took notice and acted upon their sense of collective rage to punish the Democrats for what they had done to the Palestinian people.
 
According to a report prepared for Brown University’s Costs of War project, the Biden Administration has granted Israel a record of at least $17.9 billion in military aid to Israel in the first year of the war. Additionally, according to a report published on October 4 by the non-profit investigative newspaper ProPublica, “the US has shipped more than 50,000 tons of weaponry” to Israel since October 7, 2023.
 
Merely hours after the US presidential election results were announced, the Israeli Ministry of Defence signed a deal “to acquire 25 F-15IA combat jets from US manufacturer Boeing for $5.2 billion, with an option to get 25 more,” according to Defence News. In other words, Biden remains unrepentant.
 
Biden, Harris and others may twist the logic to justify their support for Israel in any way they wish. However, there can be no denying that their administration has played a leading role in the Israeli genocide in Gaza. For this, they were duly and deservedly penalised by US voters.
 
The understandable euphoria among many of Palestine’s supporters in the US notwithstanding, we must not harbour any illusions. Neither President-elect Donald Trump nor his entourage of right-wing politicians will be the saviours of Palestine.
 
We must recall that it was Trump’s first term in office that paved the road to the complete marginalisation of the Palestinians. He did so by granting Israel sovereignty over occupied East Jerusalem, recognising the illegal settlements as legitimate, waging financial warfare against Palestinians, and attempting to destroy the UN refugee agency, UNRWA, among other actions.
 
If Trump returns to his old destructive policies in Palestine, another war will certainly start.
 
This means that the pro-Palestine camp, which has managed to convert solidarity into decisive political action, must not wait for the new US administration to adopt a more sensible political line on Palestine. Judging by the history of Republican support for Israel, no such sensibility should be expected.
 
Thus, it is time to build on the existing solidarity among all US groups that voted against genocide in the latest elections. This is the perfect opportunity to translate votes into sustained action and pressure so that all aspects of the US government may hear and heed the deafening chants of “ceasefire now” and “free, free Palestine.”
 
This time around, however, these chants are backed by solid evidence that US voters are capable of destabilising the entire political paradigm, as they did on November 5, 2024.
 
Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the editor of the Palestine Chronicle (www.palestinechronicle.com).

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