U.S. backs protests in Israel

March 8, 2023

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Why is the U.S. interfering with Israel’s domestic politics? State Dept. calls on Israel to ‘pump the brakes’ on proposed judicial reforms, backs nationwide protests.

U.S. Ambassador to Israel Thomas Nides in February called for “pumping the brakes, slow down and try to build consensus” on proposed reforms by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after supporters of the opposition parties began staging street protests. This resulted in Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli responding stating, “Mind your own business… You’re not the sovereign here… We’d be happy to debate with you international or security affairs, but respect our democracy.” Adding the diplomatic feud, Nides responded in turn, stating, “Some Israeli official—I don’t know who he is, I don’t think I’ve met him—suggested that I should stay out of Israel’s business… I really think that most Israelis do not want America to stay out of their business.” So, the U.S. State Department is actually taking a position on legislation pending before Israel’s duly elected parliament on a domestic policy issue, the composition of Israel’s courts—something Israel itself unquestionably has sovereign authority over—in turn fueling protests all over Israel.

Video: Speaker McCarthy Should Publicly Release January 6th Footage

House Speaker Kevin McCarthy should release the Jan. 6, 2021 footage of the Capitol riot to the public so that the riot can be examined by third party journalists and everyone can make up their own minds about what happened inside the Capitol.

Majority of Democrats Don’t Want Biden to Run again but Party Leaders Don’t Care

There is a growing chasm between what Democratic voters say they want to see in 2024 and what DNC strategists appear to think will secure themselves the White House for another four years. Public polling is vividly clear. Most Americans – including Democrats – have strong hesitations about President Biden running for office next cycle. However, Democratic leaders are brushing off public criticism of the Biden administration and glossing over his plummeting polling numbers. Like in the 2020 election cycle, the sentiment appears to be that while Biden isn’t a perfect candidate, he’s the best they have. This Biden-or-bust sentiment may have worked once, but the 2020 election was more of an anomaly than a typical election year.

 

Why is the U.S. interfering with Israel’s domestic politics? State Dept. calls on Israel to ‘pump the brakes’ on proposed judicial reforms, backs nationwide protests.

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By Robert Romano

After Benjamin Netanyahu secured 64 seats in Israel’s legislature, the Knesset, in Nov. 2022, leading to his sixth term as the country’s prime minister, one of the major domestic policy pushes has been to reform the country’s judiciary to give the ruling party more power to make appointments via the Judicial Selection Committee by giving the acting government the majority of seats on the committee, which be increased to 11 members, with the government with seven of those spots.

The current system requires seven out of nine members of the committee to approve new justices, and the Supreme Court gets three seats on the committee, giving the court an effective veto over any new members of the court.

The new laws would also codify judicial review, making the country’s 1992 Basic Laws off limits to said review, and otherwise allow the Knesset to override any Supreme Court ruling with a majority vote.

Members of the center-right coalition government argue the changes will strike a balance between the Basic Laws—which were declared a type of constitutional law in a 1995 Supreme Court decision similar to the United States’ Marbury v. Madison that established judicial review—and successor laws.

Sounds almost American. In the U.S., the President appoints federal judges, which are confirmed by a majority of the Senate, which sometimes is rule by a majority of the President’s party. Similarly, the U.S. has a Constitution, which cannot be overridden by the Supreme Court. Indeed, it’s the opposite, where a law can be struck down if it is found to contradict any constitutional provision.

So, such changes might make Israel’s judicial system a bit more like the U.S. and other Western countries. While that is very interesting, certainly, it is certainly not something that the U.S. State Department or President Joe Biden should be directly involving himself with.

And yet, that’s exactly what has happened. U.S. Ambassador to Israel Thomas Nides in February called for “pumping the brakes, slow down and try to build consensus” on the reforms after supporters of the opposition parties began staging street protests.

This resulted in Diaspora Affairs Minister Amichai Chikli responding stating, “Mind your own business… You’re not the sovereign here… We’d be happy to debate with you international or security affairs, but respect our democracy.”

Adding the diplomatic feud, Nides responded in turn, stating,  “Some Israeli official—I don’t know who he is, I don’t think I’ve met him—suggested that I should stay out of Israel’s business… I really think that most Israelis do not want America to stay out of their business.”

Spoken like a Roman provincial governor. Wow. The U.S. State Department is actually taking a position on legislation pending before Israel’s duly elected parliament on a domestic policy issue, the composition of Israel’s courts—something Israel itself unquestionably has sovereign authority over—in turn fueling protests all over Israel.

On the other hand, this also appears to be a standard, long-standing feature of U.S. foreign policy for many decades since the end of World War II and even before then when the examples of Spanish-American War and the Philippine-American War are considered, but also interventions in Panama, Mexico, Honduras, Haiti and so forth. World War II itself being an example, where in the aftermath the U.S. stood up governments, ostensibly democratic, in Italy, West Germany at the time and Japan, after the Axis Powers were defeated. But also during the Cold War, with attempted interventions in Cuba, Vietnam and other influence in foreign elections such as Italy from 1948 onward, to prevent communists from taking over.

And afterwards, in the 1996 election in Russia, where Bill Clinton took actions to help Boris Yeltsin to get reelected, including forestalling NATO expansion and including Russia in the G-8, but when the latter was a bridge too far for the U.S. (NATO expansion would not continue until 1999 when Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland acceded), settled on increased payments from the International Monetary Fund to Moscow, explicitly to help Yeltsin’s reelection bid (at the time it appeared possible that the communists might win the election).

Most recently, the civil war in Ukraine that began in 2014—leading to Russia annexation of Crimea and then 2022 invasion—actually started out as a policy disagreement over a pair of competing trade agreements with the European Union and Russia. President Joe Biden told the tale in his book, “Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship, and Purpose,” published in 2017, referring to his time as Vice President during the tenure of former President Barack Obama, where Obama made Biden yet another Roman provincial governor of Ukraine.

“A popular demonstration,” Biden wrote, “which started at a square in Kyiv in late 2013, when President Viktor Yanukovych reneged on his promise to take the country into the European Union, had grown from a spontaneous eruption to a real political movement — one President Yanukovych mishandled badly.”

Here, Biden is referring to the pro-Europe, anti-Russia trade agreement, the Ukraine–European Union Association Agreement. It was a trade deal Yanukovych’s then-adviser Paul Manafort had advised him to adopt, but in 2013, he rejected Manafort’s advice, pulling out of the deal. What followed was a revolution in Ukraine that ultimately ousted Yanukovych from power in 2014, embroiling Ukraine in civil war that led directly to the annexation of Crimea by Russia and several separatist uprisings in eastern Ukraine. Yanukovych then fled to Russia on Feb. 22, 2014, and the trade deal was signed in March 2014 by interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

By Biden’s account, it was his pressure that prompted Yanukovych to flee: “I made the last of many urgent calls to Yanukovych in late February of 2014, when his snipers were assassinating Ukrainian citizens by the dozens and we had credible reports that he was contemplating an even more vicious crackdown. I had been warning him for months to exercise restraint in dealing with his citizens, but on this night, three months into the demonstrations, I was telling him it was over; time for him to call off his gunmen and walk away. His only real supporters were his political patrons and his operators in the Kremlin, I reminded him, and he shouldn’t expect his Russian friends to rescue him from this disaster. Yanukovych had lost the confidence of the Ukrainian people, I said, and he was going to be judged harshly by history if he kept killing them. The disgraced president fled Ukraine the next day…”

This event sounds a lot like Biden’s description of getting Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Viktor Shokin, fired in 2016, when he threatened then-Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko with $1.2 billion of loan guarantees if the firing was not completed, with Biden bragging to the Council on Foreign Relations in 2018 that Shokin was fired the same day. Shokin says he was investigating a natural gas firm, Burisma Holdings, who Biden’s son, Hunter, served on the board of directors of and that that’s why he was fired.

So, to get a trade deal with the European Union signed, by Biden’s own account, in part helped to catalyze the overthrow of the pro-Russian Ukrainian president Yanukovych.

Often, these interventions do appear predicated upon a desire to prevent one-party states from forming in these countries that might be hostile to U.S. interests. So, in the case of Ukraine, obviously, U.S. interests would have included a desire to prevent Yanukovych from becoming a president for life, casting Ukraine back into Moscow’s sphere of influence and staging Russian forces in its country.

Paramount among those interests appears to be to keep the strategic situation as it is, or to advance it in favor of U.S. interests. Democracy comes second or even further down the hierarchy, meaning even if a democratically elected leader wishes to do business with more countries than just the West, maybe it should watch out.

Now, in Israel, in 2023, the U.S. is supporting protests in the streets of Israeli cities, with some talk of civil war in the Jewish state, with New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman writing on Feb. 28, “What Israeli leader would risk a civil war at home, a breach with Jewish democrats across the world, a break with America, significant damage to Israel’s high-tech miracle — and now open talk by Israeli soldiers that they will not die to protect a dictatorship. What Israeli leader would risk all of that for just a few technical judicial fixes?”

It is hard not to see similarities between today’s protests in Israel and the Maidan protests that began in 2013 that preceded the civil war in Ukraine. We clearly know a lot about meddling in other countries’ affairs, including democracies. Clearly, Israel is no different in the United States’ eyes.

So, maybe a better way of looking at it, however, is with Netanyahu making historic progress to expand the 2020 Abraham Accords—begun under the Trump administration—to potentially include Saudi Arabia, with first ever recognitions of Israel’s right to even exist by its Arab neighbors, which now include Bahrain and United Arab Emirates, plus the continued threat posed by Iran to the region as it speeds along to developing nuclear weapons, what American President would risk toppling Israel’s democracy to oppose “just a few technical judicial fixes?”

If anything, the U.S. position should be to respect free democracies’ internal decision making via elected, representative branches of government, but perhaps that ship sailed when the U.S. security state became determined to depose former President Donald Trump after his 2016 election by falsely accusing him and his campaign of being a Russian agent, leading to covert investigations of his campaign, his transition and then his sitting administration once he took office in 2017, culminating in a special counsel who found no conspiracy by the campaign with Russia to interfere in the 2016 elections.

We’ve seen this movie before. The current U.S. posture is akin to a local mob collector coming over to Israel saying, “Nice democracy you have there, Bibi, shame if anything were to happen to it.”

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2023/03/why-is-the-u-s-interfering-with-israels-domestic-politics-state-dept-calls-on-israel-to-pump-the-brakes-on-proposed-judicial-reforms-backs-nationwide-protests/

 

Video: Speaker McCarthy Should Publicly Release January 6th Footage

6

To view online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O9ubnH6FtVQ

 

Majority of Democrats Don’t Want Biden to Run again but Party Leaders Don’t Care

6

By Manzanita Miller

There is a growing chasm between what Democratic voters say they want to see in 2024 and what DNC strategists appear to think will secure themselves the White House for another four years. 

Public polling is vividly clear. Most Americans – including Democrats – have strong hesitations about President Biden running for office next cycle.

However, Democratic leaders are brushing off public criticism of the Biden administration and glossing over his plummeting polling numbers. Like in the 2020 election cycle, the sentiment appears to be that while Biden isn’t a perfect candidate, he’s the best they have. This Biden-or-bust sentiment may have worked once, but the 2020 election was more of an anomaly than a typical election year.

The nation was in the throes of the Black Swan pandemic and made a political fixture with a five-decade long career like Biden somewhat more appealing. Since then, economic issues, a burgeoning battle in Eastern Europe, the threat of issues with China, and the immigration crisis have become central issues for the American people, and Biden isn’t seen as capable of fixing these issues. 

On top of the changing political landscape, core Democratic constituencies like young people and Hispanics are some of the strongest opponents to Biden running again. These groups may have given the president a chance three years ago, but surveys show their views of Biden have outright reversed.

A new Washington Post-ABC News poll shows nearly two-thirds of Americans (62 percent) would be ‘dissatisfied’ or ‘angry’ if Biden were to run again, while just 7 percent said they’d be excited.

Even among his own party, less than a third of Democrats and leaners (31%) think Biden should be nominated for the party pick in 2024, while 58% say he shouldn’t.

A new AP-NORC poll shows a vast majority of Americans do not want Biden to run again, but the sentiment is strongest with younger voters. By a margin of 85% to 15%, Americans eighteen to twenty-nine say they don’t want Biden to run for president again. Eighty-three percent of voters aged thirty to forty-four don’t want to see Biden run again while 16% do.

However, all signs point to Democratic insiders pushing for Biden to run again.

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Democratic National Committee recently “approved a resolution expressing its full and complete support of the president’s re-election” and Biden “isn’t expected to face a major primary challenge.”

Reuters recently reported that, “establishment Democrats” in Pennsylvania convened in February at the state party conference and declared “one message for U.S. President Joe Biden as he weighs running for a second term: Run, Joe, run.”

However, the party’s refusal to acknowledge public sentiment and Biden’s push to reshape the 2024 DNC primary calendar has angered some progressive Democrats. RootsAction, a progressive grassroots group that is critical of the Biden Administration, showed up to protest Biden’s move to upset the primary calendar at the Democratic National Committee (DNC) winter conference last month.

RootsAction political director Sam Rosenthal questioned the ethics of letting Biden and his allies upend the DNC primary calendar to favor themselves in case a Democratic primary challenger does emerge. Rosenthal told Reuters, "Joe Biden has repeatedly said he plans to seek renomination. In case there's a Democratic challenger, it would be simply unethical for the DNC to allow Biden to dictate key rules of the contest, the order of the primaries, before the race begins." 

Importantly, core members of the Democratic Party base, including young people and Hispanics, are some of the groups most critical of President Biden and most in search of a new Democratic pick for 2024. 

A recent Monmouth University poll shows Biden’s approval rating with 18- to 34-year-olds is underwater by a jaw-dropping 35 points. In that poll, just 28% of young voters said they approve of Biden’s job as President, down 31 points from when he took office.

A New York Times/Siena College poll found the numbers are even worse for Biden: 94% of 18- to 29-year-olds say they want a different candidate to run in 2024.

Americans for Limited Government Foundation has been tracking the views of Generation Z for over five years, and our research shows while “Zoomers” don’t necessarily view themselves as Republicans, most agree with an America First philosophy and oppose globalist policies. Our research shows 73 percent of Generation Zers support an “America First” philosophy, where the primary goal of any law or policy must be to focus on the needs of Americans, even if they are not in line with the interests of foreign nations and allies. 

Our research also finds strong anti-war attitudes among Gen Z, with over half of young people saying they won’t consider a candidate who supports foreign wars. Sixty-eight percent of Generation Z Republicans, an equal share of Generation Z Democrats (68%) and 71% of Generation Z Independents think the U.S. should stay out of international conflicts and only become involved when we are forced to.

Biden’s numbers with Hispanics are arguably worse than those with young people. A recent Quinnipiac poll found just 19% of Hispanics approve of the job Biden is doing as President, and a full 70% disapprove.

An NBC News/Telemundo poll shows Latinos disapprove of Biden’s handling of the economy 54% to 41% and disapprove of the cost of living under Biden 60% to 35%. The same poll found Latinos say 39% to 33% that Biden’s economic policies have hurt more than they have helped and 54% of Latinos say their family income is declining due to rising living expenses. Latinos also disapprove of Biden’s handling of border security 51% to 42%.

While these numbers may seem harsh, it is unsurprising Hispanics and young voters are turning away from Biden and the radical left as they watch economic and social mayhem unfold.

The Biden administration’s disastrous handling of the economy, foreign policy and immigration are driving Hispanic and young voters away. Whether Democratic insiders will shift course and choose a new candidate for 2024 remains to be seen, but if they do not, there will be a substantial opportunity for the Republican nominee to make a case for a new direction.

Manzanita Miller is an associate analyst with Americans for Limited Government Research Foundation.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2023/03/majority-of-democrats-dont-want-biden-to-run-again-but-party-leaders-dont-care/

 

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