Democrats Are Getting a Brutal Lesson in How Much the Politics on Israel Have Changed



Politics


/
October 23, 2025

From Pete Buttigieg to Gavin Newsom, party bigwigs are finding out the hard way that the old platitudes don’t work anymore.

Pete Buttigieg's appearance on "Pod Save America" did not go very well.

Pete Buttigieg’s appearance on Pod Save America did not go very well.

(Breaking Points)

When the North Carolina Democratic Party adopted a first-of-its-kind resolution at its June convention calling Israel an apartheid state and demanding a total US arms embargo, it didn’t receive much attention. And yet, in the months since, it’s become clear that North Carolina’s Democrats were ahead of a growing trend.

Multiple Democratic members of Congress who were previously backed by AIPAC decided that it wasn’t tenable to be affiliated with the pro-Israel group anymore. Deborah Ross and Valerie Foushee, two members of the North Carolina congressional delegation, have both disavowed the organization, and the latter called for offensive military aid to Israel to be halted. Elsewhere in the country, the likes of Morgan McGarvey in Kentucky and Seth Moulton of Massachusetts are now trying to distance themselves as well.

These are relatively centrist Democrats, and yet AIPAC doesn’t seem to be able to maintain its previously unquestioned influence on them. What’s happening, exactly?

To answer that question, one only has to look at the polling of Americans, and Democrats more specifically, on the issue of Palestine. Two years of genocide in Gaza and intensified apartheid across the rest of occupied Palestine have severely degraded the public’s perception of US support for Israel.

A Pew Research poll earlier this month found that 59 percent of all Americans view the Israeli state negatively. Among Democrats, that number increases to a whopping 77 percent. A New York Times/Siena Poll from September found that 40 percent of all Americans, and 60 percent of Democrats, believe that Israel has murdered children intentionally. And according to a Pew poll from earlier in the year, negative Democratic perceptions of Israel have risen across every age demographic, with 71 percent of Democrats aged 18–49 having a negative view of Israel in 2025, and 66 percent of Democrats over 50.

Clearly, the pro-Israel consensus has evaporated among the Democratic and liberal base. Not only that—being uncritical of Israel and its regime of control over Palestinians today is becoming an impediment to Democratic politicians. While it won’t decisively win elections on its own, especially in a local context where foreign policy is a secondary or even tertiary campaign plank, a Democrat who is willing to buck the previous consensus could benefit from being able to distinguish themselves as the party tries to find a path out of the deluge of Trumpian authoritarianism. (Zohran Mamdani is the current favorite to become New York’s next mayor in part because he understood that.) And, as several high-profile Democrats are discovering, a candidate who tries to sing the same old song about Israel could find themselves on the backfoot.

Take, for example, Pete Buttigieg. In a recent interview with Pod Save America, the usually eloquent Buttigieg was asked a series of straightforward questions. Would he support restricting aid to Israel? Would he recognize the State of Palestine, as other G7 countries have done recently? Would Israel’s behavior finally be a factor in how we treat the country? Instead of having a ready answer, Buttigieg delivered vague platitudes about moral conscience and needing to support Israel’s security. In particular, Buttigieg told Favreau, “I think that we, as Israel’s strongest ally and friend, you put your arm around your friend when there’s something like this going on, and talk about what we’re prepared to do together.” It was an odd choice, to say the least, to call an apartheid state a friend and talk of genocide as somethig akin to self-harm.

In the days that followed, Buttigieg was criticized by fellow Democratic public officials and liberals online. As a man who aspires to higher office, Buttigieg seemed to understand where the wind was blowing. He sought to clarify and update his public-facing positions in a subsequent interview with Politico. Yes, he would indeed have supported Bernie Sanders’s resolutions to restrict aid. Yes, he would in fact recognize the State of Palestine. No, the US should not pass another 10-year military aid package for a country that doesn’t change its behavior.

None of these positions are particularly radical, and it is rather odd that it took this long for a potential 2028 front-runner to adopt them, but it is notable that Buttigieg, who is not on the left flank, has done so. It indicates something serious about the underlying dynamics in Democratic politics, and to his credit, he sensed it. The center has shifted.

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Buttigieg is not the only one to have sensed it, though.

Another potential candidate for president, Senator Cory Booker, went on the I’ve Had It podcast last week. He probably thought he was going to get softball questions about almond milk like Barack Obama did when he appeared there in 2024. Instead, the hosts grilled him relentlessly on Israel. When asked by cohost Jennifer Welch if he believes Netanyahu is a war criminal, Booker called it a “loaded and hot” question designed to be a litmus test. In fact, he even went as far as to say that the question undermines his ability to help make peace happen.

To say that Welch was unimpressed might be an understatement, since the pod’s official social media scorched him for not being direct in answering the question.

California Governor Gavin Newsom, for his part, fared even worse when podcaster Van Latham asked him about AIPAC in a recent interview, responding by short-circuiting and saying the question was “interesting” a full seven times.

Current candidates for public office, as well as incumbents, are also feeling the pressure to differentiate from past positions and the old consensus. Mallory McMorrow, a Democrat running for Senate in Michigan, recently said at a campaign event in Allegan that she believes Israel has committed genocide in Gaza—a comment that many pundits would have seen as fatal to her campaign even a year ago. This means that two of the three candidates in the Michigan primary now agree that the Gaza genocide is real, with Abdul el-Sayed having been clear on the issue from the very start. (Elissa Slotkin, the sitting Michigan senator, has said that she would have supported Sanders’s bid to restrict military assistance.)

McMorrow also said she would not welcome AIPAC’s endorsement nor accept any donations from them—a seeming response to reports that she had tried to solicit AIPAC’s support. The announcement from Moulton—a hawkish Democrat with no history of boldness on this issue—that he would be returning all AIPAC donations and would refuse AIPAC’s support in his bid to unseat Senator Ed Markey in Massachusetts was even more startling.

But the reality is that the trend line against Israel’s public image isn’t likely to reverse in any dramatic way. An Economist/YouGov poll from August found that 45 percent of the public believe Israel is committing genocide, and that 65 percent of all Democrats believe that there is a genocide. Seven in 10 Harris voters in 2024 believe that Israel has committed genocide. A whopping 54 percent of all Americans aged 18–29 believe that Israel has committed genocide.

The Palestinian-American pollster Shibley Telhami has noted that this is a paradigmatic shift in public perception which is unlikely to be overturned. A whole set of people believe that Israel has committed the highest crime in international law, and this will influence Democratic (and American) policy in the decades to come.

As of writing this, a so-called ceasefire in Gaza is supposedly in effect. Despite this, Palestinians are still being routinely murdered and displaced in Gaza and in the occupied West Bank. The theft of Palestinian land via settlement and colonization remains ongoing. The Palestinians of occupied East Jerusalem are still under threat. The Palestinian citizens of Israel are facing some of the most oppressive days since the martial law on them was lifted in 1966. It is thus abundantly clear that the question of Palestine has not been resolved. And absent a comprehensive resolution of the question of Palestine, which must clearly guarantee our rights and our ability to return and live as equal and free people on the land, this change in American public perception against supporting Israel won’t just be magically stopped. Seeing as how Trump is in no way capable of facilitating this resolution, it is safe to assume that these changes in public opinion will only continue. It would be prudent, then, for Democrats up and down the ballot to quickly determine how to oppose genocide, apartheid, and colonialism and then articulate this opposition to the base, which is increasingly hungry for the moral clarity needed on this issue.

Y.L. Al-Sheikh

Y.L. Al-Sheikh is a Palestinian American writer and organizer.

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