
DNC Chair Ken Martin speaks during a Resolutions Committee meeting, at the party’s summer meeting in Minneapolis on Aug. 26, 2025. Screenshot from video
Early in the Aug. 26 meeting, members advanced Chair Ken Martinâs humanitarian-focused Gaza resolution. The text cited the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attack on Israel and the hostages still held by the terror group, detailed the IsraelâHamas warâs toll, urged secure and unrestricted aid deliveries to Gaza, and reaffirmed pursuit of a two-state solution through direct negotiations.
Later, Martin asked to withdraw his resolution, to which the panel agreed. He said the party needs more dialogue and announced a task force to continue the discussion.
A separate proposal called for an immediate cease-fire in the conflict in Gaza, an arms embargo, suspension of U.S. aid to Israel, and recognition of Palestine as a state. The proposal failed after debate and a defeated amendment. It was the only resolution that failed in the committeeâs meeting.
All resolutions approved at the meeting were nonbinding but indicated the direction of party leadership.
Allison Minnerly of Florida, who sponsored the failed measure, told members during the meeting: âThis resolution is straightforward and enforceable. It calls for the end of supplying weapons and military aid as we see the war ongoing and raging in Gaza.â
She said, âThis is a moment that calls for leadership, listening, and hard conversations.â
The Democratic Majority for Israel (DMFI) praised the rejection of the arms embargo proposal in a post on X shortly after it failed.
âToday, the Democratic Party sent a clear and resounding message by defeating a reckless and divisive resolution: we stand with the people of Israel and will continue to do so,â DMFI President Brian Romick said. âFor more than 75 years, the U.S.-Israel relationship has been strong because itâs grounded in shared values and mutual security interests.â
He added that passing the resolution would have been âa gift to Republicans … and rewarded Hamasâ brutality.â
âIn this critical moment, Democrats stood firm, rejected this dangerous effort, and sent a message that they remain united in our commitment to Israelâs security and our long-standing alliance.â
Some Democrats and pro-Palestinian activists have been alleging that Israelâs ongoing military responses to the October 2023 terrorist attack were âgenocideâ against Gazans, while Israel said it has been targeting Hamas terrorists to eliminate the group and bring hostages home.
Adin Lenchner, a Brooklyn-based Democratic strategist, said the committeeâs handling of Gaza âwas completely out of step with where Democrats are.â
Lenchner told The Epoch Times via text that only a small minority of Democrats support Israelâs military operations in Gaza, âyet party leadership remains paralyzedâterrified of crossing AIPAC [the American Israel Public Affairs Committee] instead of responding to the moral urgency of this moment.â
âYounger voters see the difference between opposing atrocities and antisemitism, and they expect their leaders to see it too,â he said. âBy ceding ground to those who weaponize Jewish safety for political gain, the party is risking its credibility with an entire generation on this issue.â
He pointed to New York City politics, saying that figures such as Mayor Eric Adams and former Gov. Andrew Cuomoâboth Democrats running as independentsâpresented themselves as pro-Israel and against anti-Semitism, while avoiding the question of the human toll in Gaza.
Members also adopted paired measures against anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. The anti-Semitism resolution was amended to acknowledge bias across the political spectrum, including within the Democratic party, and to affirm a special responsibility to protect Jewish participation in party spaces without fear, harassment, exclusion, or violence. The Islamophobia resolution used parallel protections for Muslim participation and speech at political events.
A diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) resolution passed after backers said DEI is a core national value. Sponsor Bill Owen of Tennessee said DEI reflects the countryâs history.
âTo our Democratic colleagues and progressives, I remind them that all means all. We say all people are created equal. All means all. It means our LGBT, fellow citizens … it means old white guys like me … It means young black girls like my granddaughter,â he said.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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