During negotiations with the DNC and the Harris campaign, we were repeatedly told by interlocutors that Harris couldn’t meet any of our basic requests (a policy shift from Biden, a Palestinian speaker at the DNC, a statement distinguishing herself from Trump on Israel, or even a meeting with Michigan families who lost loved ones to Israeli bombs) because of AIPAC-aligned politicians like Fetterman, who might take to TV, rile up suburban white and Jewish voters, and fracture the party’s coalition in a swing state.

That political calculus alienated a key voting bloc, although likely not large enough to have shifted the ultimate election outcomes, that should be part of a durable Democratic majority. But few will ever be held accountable for that choice.

A Fetterman staffer condemning Uncommitted for not advocating for Palestinians ‘the right way’ is like an arsonist scolding the fire department for using the wrong hose.

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    • meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      Identity politics isn’t just a weakness; it’s the entire playbook now. They’ve traded actual principles for a checklist of performative gestures that alienate everyone outside their echo chamber. A Palestinian speaker wouldn’t have been a magic bullet, but it’s not about votes—it’s about showing some moral backbone. Instead, they doubled down on the same corporate-approved cowardice that makes them indistinguishable from their so-called opposition.

      And let’s be real: the problem isn’t just Netanyahu or his leadership—it’s that the U.S. props up these regimes while pretending to be neutral. The Dems could’ve drawn a line in the sand, but nah, they’d rather clutch their pearls and blame voters for their own failures. It’s not strategy; it’s self-sabotage dressed as pragmatism.