DNC Rejects Resolution Targeting AIPAC 'Dark Money'
The committee instead backed a broader campaign finance measure that targets outside spending and calls for greater transparency after AIPAC-linked groups spent $22 million in Illinois primaries.
- On Thursday, the Democratic National Committee Resolutions Committee rejected a symbolic resolution condemning the American Israel Public Affairs Committee , advancing instead a broader measure targeting dark money in electoral politics.
- Proponents criticized AIPAC's $14 million spending in Illinois primary contests, arguing such expenditures raised concerns about "undue influence" over democratic debate and policymaking.
- A Pew Research survey released this week shows 80 percent of Democrats hold unfavorable views of Israel, up from 69 percent last year, reflecting a sharp disconnect between party leadership and its base.
- Related measures on Palestinian recognition and arms transfers were referred to the Middle East Working Group, which party leaders defended as essential for managing complex internal divisions.
- The rejection widens a rift between Democrats and voters critical of Israel's military actions, potentially creating electoral headwinds for the party in 2026 primary and midterm races.
52 Articles
52 Articles
DNC rejects resolutions condemning AIPAC 'dark money', recognizing Gaza genocide
The resolution against the pro-Israel lobby, criticized the group for heavily funding primary challenges against candidates critical of Israel, saying that the spending 'raises concerns about the role of large outside spending in shaping Democratic Party positions.' A separate measure to condition U.S. aid to Israel also failed
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 37% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium




























