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GOP Weakens Israel Language in 2012 Party Platform

NJDC — September 5, 2012 – 1:08 pm | GOP Hypocrisies | Israel | Republicans | Stop the Smears Comments (1) Add a comment

NJDC President and CEO David A. Harris issued the following statement:

Today we’re learning that the Republican Party removed strong language pertaining to Israel and Jerusalem from their party platform between 2008 and 2012, yet they have the temerity to point fingers at Democrats and President Barack Obama—the leader who has built a stellar pro-Israel record of accomplishment. Their hypocrisy is stunning, but not surprising.

In 2008, the GOP platform noted, ‘We support Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel and moving the American embassy to that undivided capital of Israel.’ In 2012, that language was gone. No reference to an undivided capital, no reference to America’s embassy—gone. Does this mean the Republican Party is suddenly anti-Israel? Of course not. But it does mean that GOP leaders pointing fingers are wildly hypocritical—given this change and others.

The original media report, according to Buzzfeed, appears below:

Republicans Also Dialed Back Platform’s Israel Language

The missing language: “Undivided” Jerusalem and an embassy move.

Democrats under fire for a similar move.

Buzzfeed Politics

Posted Sep 5, 2012 11:57am EDT

With Democrats trying to put out a fire around the party platform’s lack of specific language backing Israel that appeared in the 2008 version, a Democratic source points out that Republicans also toned down elements of their stance on Israel in the document.

A close ally of Mitt Romney, Jim Talent, beat back an attempt at the platform committee to remove a reference to the two-state solution last month.

There are also elements of the 2008 Republican platform absent from the 2012 version.

The key sentence present in 2008 and missing in 2012 is: “We support Jerusalem as the undivided capital of Israel and moving the American embassy to that undivided capital of Israel.”

In both parties’ cases, the revisions don’t seem to reflect a dramatic policy shift, but rather attempts by party leadership to avoid foreign policy commitments in the non-binding political document.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/buzzfeedpolitics/republicans-also-dialed-back-platforms-israel

Comments

motek | September 13, 2012 – 5:45 am

Romney is caving in to Ron Paul on this one.  Romney has no positions, he just caves in to whomever he thinks can get him more votes.  Let’s shout out about this hypocrisy.

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