The Democratic Party’s divisions over Israel and the war in Gaza were on messy display at a meeting of the Democratic National Committee on Tuesday, as members weighed just how far to go in reprimanding Israel for its conduct on the battlefield.
Then, the party chairman abruptly abandoned his own proposal, kicking the subject to a task force in an acknowledgment of enduring intraparty tensions.
“There’s divide in our party on this issue,” Ken Martin, the D.N.C. chairman, said. “We have to find a path forward as a party and we have to stay unified.”
Who's to say genocide is bad? Who knows if fascism is bad? Democrats are the party of dead weight
Then, the party chairman abruptly abandoned his own proposal, kicking the subject to a task force in an acknowledgment of enduring intraparty tensions.
“There’s divide in our party on this issue,” Ken Martin, the D.N.C. chairman, said. “We have to find a path forward as a party and we have to stay unified.”
Who's to say genocide is bad? Who knows if fascism is bad? Democrats are the party of dead weight