By Noah Rothman
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) “working
definition” of antisemitism, to which the U.S.
government and 30 other nations subscribe, identifies several behavioral
patterns that are indicative of anti-Jewish bias. Among them are the “double
standards” that are often applied to Israel but are “not expected or demanded
of any other democratic nation.”
By way of logical inference, then, subscribers to the
IHRA’s definition must concede that applying a standard to Jews at an
individual level that no one else is compelled to observe must also fit that
bill. That’s a corollary that Democrats don’t appear to recognize.
Reportedly, the Democratic National Committee will consider a resolution next month that would denounce the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee by name — specifically, the money it
spends in the effort to scuttle anti-Israel progressives’ campaigns.
“At a time when Democratic voters might really not have
felt represented or seen when it came to Gaza or seeing their party support
Palestinian rights or stand against military conflict,” said Allison Minnerly,
the DNC member and activist sponsoring the resolution, “this could be one step
toward bringing those voters back into the party.”
Increasingly, hostility toward interests that are
remotely supportive of Israeli security policy is becoming the price of
admission into national Democratic politics. AIPAC is only the most visible
feature of this new litmus test. The party’s likeliest 2028 presidential hopefuls are racing to swear
off AIPAC dollars, each with more revulsion over the pernicious influence of
Israel-tainted money than the last. It seems that denouncing the Jewish State
over its mesmeric influence over American politicians and for executing (imaginary) crimes
against humanity is the sine qua non for success in the Democratic Party.
But AIPAC isn’t a lobby devoted to advancing foreign
interests. Its activities are supported by Americans who enjoy a constitutional
right to petition their representatives for the redress of grievances, which is
all that lobbying is. But as Semafor’s Dave Weigel noted, the
distinction that progressives are attempting to make is one that only the least
discerning far-left “anti-Zionists” would recognize:
And the Democratic Party’s leading lights appear to
recognize the degree to which the opprobrium heaped on those who benefit from
pro-Israel expenditures will never be applied broadly:
Steyer maintains that tens of millions of dollars in contributions
to Democratic candidates and causes over the years come from “disclosed funds,”
not from the anonymous donations that constitute so-called “dark money.” But
reporting over the years has indicated that Steyer and other prominent
Democrats are not above associating with anonymously funded nonprofits
and political action committees. Progressives don’t care.
Indeed, since the 2018 midterm cycle, Democrats have been
the primary beneficiaries of “dark money” contributions. “Overall, dark money
groups boosting Democrats put up about $1.2 billion to influence 2024
elections, while groups boosting Republicans accounted for about $664 million,”
the Brennan Center reported. Nor are Democrats allergic to the
largess provided by other foreign interests, even those with links to America’s adversaries abroad.
The Democratic Party is eager to convince progressive
activists that its members are not susceptible to the influence associated with
Je– rather, Israeli money. After all, those are the only divestments
progressives are demanding. It’s a curious monomania, and it seems to fit
within IHRA’s rubric.
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