Source: In These Times
On Tuesday night, Pennsylvania state Rep. Summer Lee declared victory in her hard-fought primary election for the stateās 12th Congressional District. Lee, who had built aĀ comfortable lead early in the race as an outspoken progressive leader with aĀ record of local organizing, saw her frontrunner status evaporate by election day amid an onslaught of deceptive out-of-state attack ads funded by aĀ variety of pro-IsraelĀ groups.
If she wins the general election in the deep-blue district, Lee, who In These Times interviewed in 2018 after she won the Democratic nomination for the 34th Pennsylvania state house district, would become the first Black woman and the first democratic socialist to represent Pennsylvania in Congress. She is running on aĀ platform of enacting policies such as Medicare for All, aĀ Green New Deal and carceral reform while calling for ending the filibuster in the Senate, expanding the number of Supreme Court justices and ending cashĀ bail.
āThey canāt say Black women canāt win,ā Lee said to supporters on Tuesday night. āāWhen we come together, we canāt be stopped.ā In aĀ statement released after declaring victory, she said: āāWe built aĀ movement in Western Pennsylvania that took on corporate power, stood up for working families, and beat back aĀ multimillion-dollar smear campaign. This was never about one candidateāāāit was about the people of this district who have been left behind by corporations who put their profits over ourĀ lives.ā
Polling from early April showed Lee with aĀ 25-point lead over the second-place candidate, millionaire Pittsburgh lawyer Steve Irwin. But by the end of the month, according to reporting from Jewish Insider, private polling found that the aggressive negative campaign waged against Lee had been successfulāāāIrwin had erased her lead, leaving the two candidates in aĀ statistical dead heat. As of Wednesday evening, Lee was leading Irwin 41.7 percent to 41.3 percent, with 99 percent of the voteĀ reported.
In total, pro-Israel groups spent at least $2.5 million on the race, almost all of it attacking Lee. The American Israel Public Affairs Committeeās political wing, the United Democracy Project (UDP), spent more than $2 million running attack ads and aĀ direct mail campaign. Despite being funded by aĀ pro-Israel group, none of the UDPās ads or mailers mentioned Middle Eastern politics, Israel or Palestine. Instead, the ads questioned Leeās Democratic Party credentials, highlighted her 2020 criticism of then-candidate Joe Biden, and cast her as aĀ threat to theĀ party.
For her part, Lee has objected to claims that sheās anti-Israel, while also voicing criticism of U.S. politicians who havenāt spoken out against attacks on Palestinians. Lee has said she believes aid to Israel, as well as all American allies, should be conditional on their adherence to humanĀ rights.
Local Democratic leaders who supported Leeās campaign, including Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey and state House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton, penned an open letter to the UDP condemning the advertisements and noting that AIPAC endorsed āāover 100+ pro-insurrectionistĀ Republicans.ā
The UDPās lines of attack were very similar to those used against Nina Turner, the Bernie Sanders 2020 campaign co-chair and former Ohio state senator who saw her commanding lead in Ohioās 11th Congressional District primary vanish last year after Democratic Majority for Israel spent nearly $2 million on ads attacking her. She lost her rematch race earlier this month to incumbent Rep. Shontel Brown (DāOhio), who benefitted from the attacks onĀ Turner.
Lee, too, was the beneficiary of outside money. Progressive groups such as the League of Conservation Voters, Justice Democrats, the Working Families Party and the Congressional Progressive Caucus spent $1.7 million supporting her campaign, viewing the 12th district as aĀ prime pick-up opportunity forĀ progressives.
Lee was endorsed by high-profile national progressives, including Sens. Bernie Sanders (IāVt.) and Elizabeth Warren (DāMass.) as well as Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (DāN.Y.), Rashida Tlaib (DāMich.), Jamaal Bowman (DāN.Y.), and Mark Pocan (DāWisc.), and 14 state legislators. The local branches of national Jewish progressive groups Bend the Arc and JĀ Street also endorsed her.
Only three active state legislators endorsed Irwin, but he won the support of the retiring incumbent, 14-term Rep. Mike Doyle (DāPenn.). Irwin was also endorsed by aĀ number of local unions, despite previously leading the labor and employment division of Leech Tishman, aĀ self-declared āāpredominantly management-sideā law firm that offers āāunion avoidanceā services. However, the local AFL-CIO, which previously opposed Lee over her anti-fracking stance, declined to endorse Irwin after his union-busting work came to publicĀ attention.
The newly-drawn, heavily Democratic 12th district covers Pittsburgh and the cityās southeastern suburbs. It is widely expected that the Democratic nominee will easily win the general election against likely Republican candidate, Mike Doyle, who is unrelated to the retiringĀ Democrat.
Leeās apparent victory would be aĀ blow for DMFI, which was formed in 2019Ā in part to quash the growth of pro-Palestinian sentiment among Democratic lawmakers, and which spent $400,000 supporting IrwināsĀ campaign.
Progressive Greg Casar, who won his March primary in Texasā deep-blue 35th congressional district, repudiated the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement and said he supported military aid to Israel in aĀ letter he wrote to aĀ local rabbi that was published by Jewish Insider. While Casar lost the support of the Austin chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America chapter, he also avoided the financial firepower the pro-Israel lobby has deployed on similar candidates and cruised to aĀ comfortable victory.
A spokesperson for Casarās campaign says, āāSimilar to many progressive Democrats running this cycle, Casarās position is to restrict U.S. aid from being used in aĀ manner that violates human rights in any country, including but not limited toĀ Israel.ā
Meanwhile, Jessica Cisneros, who is currently in aĀ runoff election against nine-term incumbent conservative Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar in aĀ district just south of Casarās, has had to contend with the United Democracy Projectās $1.2 million dollar spend against her after expressing support forĀ Palestinians.
The massive amounts of money being funneled from pro-Israel groups to defeat progressive candidates has caught the eye of political observers. As JāStreet spokesperson Logan Bayroff recently told the Guardian, āāAIPAC are taking all this money from Republican donors, and theyāre obfuscating the fact that theyāre aĀ very Republican-aligned organization while trying to persuade Democratic voters who they shouldĀ support.ā
And Justice Democrats candidate communications manager Usamah Andrabi said to the Intercept of Summer Leeās race, āāAlmost $3 million was spent trying to stop Pennsylvanians from electing their first Black Congresswomanāāāimagine if that money was instead being used to protect Democratsā majority inĀ November.ā
After declaring victory, Lee posted to Twitter: āāOur victory shows that we can overcome the billionaire class that wants to divide and conquer us all with fear and lies-for-profit, if only we come together across our differences for aĀ positive vision of multiracial democracy. We can have nice things, if weĀ fight.ā
Nick Vachon is aĀ writer based in NewĀ York.Ā
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