At the Democratic National Convention, Vice President Kamala Harris tried to walk a tightrope on the issue of Israel’s war in Gaza. She sought to comfort supporters of Israel’s conduct by proposing no policy breaks from President Joe Biden’s support for Israel. But she also used subtly emotive language to imply that she might approach the issue in a more dovish manner than Biden. While it would be a stretch to say that Harris was courting the pro-Palestinian vote, she created space for some to see the prospect of a respite for Palestinians under her presidency. “She announced no break with administration policy here, and it felt like a complete break with the administration,” The New York Times’ Ezra Klein said of Harris’ rhetorical approach in a podcast after her DNC speech.
These kinds of messages from Harris could further repel progressives, Arab Americans and Muslim Americans.
But over the past week, Harris’ campaign has sent out campaign surrogates and had communications with the media that place her more firmly on the side of hawkishness. It’s a troubling development, as Israel unleashes new nightmares for civilians in northern Gaza and continues to escalate its war with Hezbollah in its ground incursion into Lebanon. And on a political level, these kinds of messages from Harris could further repel progressives, Arab Americans and Muslim Americans who have expressed an openness to defecting to third parties or staying home over voting for the Democrats’ Gaza policy.
Harris is neck and neck with Trump in Michigan, a state with significant communities of Jewish voters and Arab American voters. Neither of those communities is a monolith, but they do tend to skew in opposite directions on Israel policy, and so Harris has a delicate (if not impossible) task if she were trying to appeal to both simultaneously. That’s why it’s disappointing that her campaign sent Rep. Richie Torres, D-N.Y., to meet with Jewish Michigan voters to convince them, according to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, that Harris is a “pro-Israel stalwart.” Notably, Torres is not Jewish, nor is he from Michigan. But he is one of the most strident and combative Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives on the issue of defending Israel’s military operation in Gaza, particularly on social media. He’s a fervent critic of people who criticize Israel’s conduct, and has preposterously accused the pro-cease-fire Uncommitted movement of seeking “war.”
Torres was sent to speak at a private event, not a major rally, but campaigns know that their choice of surrogates and what those surrogates say will be reported on and interpreted as symbols of a campaign’s values. That’s the whole point of them. Harris had the option to send a Democrat with a balanced worldview, but chose not to. The message that Torres’ Michigan visit sends is that Harris is fine being represented by an activist supporter of a military operation which premier human rights observers and scholars have deemed a genocide.








