Opinion

The role of the Gaza genocide in Kamala Harris’s loss

The cause of Kamala Harris’ disastrous failure in the 2024 presidential election will forever be debated, but there are good reasons to believe the Israeli genocide in Gaza played a significant role.

Why did Kamala Harris lose the 2024 presidential election?

There is no shortage of answers to this question, most of them self-affirming and offered up to serve whatever agenda the pundit in question is trying to advance. That is certainly what you’re seeing now on CNN and MSNBC.

Voters who want something better in future elections than the awful choice we had this year must try to be more honest. But that honesty should not be false modesty either. We need to accurately assess our strength and power, not overstate nor understate it.

The question of the United States’ Middle East policy is not a simple one. There can be no doubt that Mideast policy, especially regarding the genocide in Gaza, played a profound role in this campaign. But can we say that Harris lost this race because of Gaza?

Disappearing votes

The most telling fact in this race is the drop in voter turnout. Trump is currently about 700,000 votes short of his 2020 tally, and when the smoke clears, he is likely to be right around the 74.2 million votes he got four years ago.

But Harris as compared to Joe Biden in 2020 is a different story. She currently has just over 69 million votes. That number may grow a bit when the counting is done, but it is going to be well short of Biden’s 81.2 million votes in 2020. 

Where did the votes go? Not to the Green Party, which only increased its tally by about 300,000 votes. No, those were voters who didn’t vote in the presidential race at all.

Donald Trump is the first Republican to win the popular vote since 2004 and the first non-incumbent to do so since 1988. That’s despite the very real threat of authoritarianism he brings, his history of sexual assault, his dozens of felony convictions for corruption, and all the debacles of his prior presidency that are too numerous to list here.

So was it because of Gaza?

Many academic articles and books will doubtless be written about the 2024 election. Theories will emerge, but the cause of Harris’ disastrous failure will forever be debated. Still, there are good reasons to believe the Middle East in general and Gaza in particular played a significant role.

When voter turnout is this depressed, it is not due to apathy, but to disillusionment. This lack of turnout for Harris doesn’t mean people don’t recognize the threat Trump represents; it means they don’t see Harris as the right answer and they resent being forced to choose not just the lesser evil, but a candidate so distasteful that voting for her is inconceivable, even if the alternative is worse. 

There’s more than one issue that reflects how terrible a candidate Harris is and how downright horrible her campaign was. These include immigration, the economy (where she repeatedly told people struggling to pay their rent how good they have it in this “Bidenomics paradise”), her embrace of war criminal Dick Cheney and his daughter Liz, and other points. We also must not discount the effect misogyny and racism might have had on some voters.

No single factor was decisive in explaining Harris’s failure, but Gaza became a symbol for them all.

But no factor was so stark as Gaza and the approach to Israel. That doesn’t necessarily mean Gaza was the decisive factor; indeed, no single factor was decisive, and several, had they been different, might have led to a different outcome. But Gaza became a symbol for all of them.

Harris made it clear from the outset that she had no intention of moving away from Biden’s genocidal policies in Gaza. While her marketing team kept filling social and mainstream media with whispers suggesting she was really trying behind the scenes to modify those policies, in public she didn’t just double down on the policies, she used Biden’s talking points, often even quoting Biden’s or Antony Blinken’s common lines verbatim. 

While the bipartisan Washington foreign policy blob largely backed all-out support for Israel, Democratic voters wanted a ceasefire and certainly wanted the United States to stop supporting the devastation in Gaza. That disconnect was at least as important as objections to the policy itself.

Voters are nervous about the Mideast conflict. They are worried about it spreading, drawing the U.S. in and possibly  then also involving the other major powers in NATO, Russia, and China, giving them two wars that are scaring them. The possibility of confrontation with China over Taiwan only adds fuel to this fire, and the Democrats have shown themselves to be a warmongering party.

When people protested the continuing support for Israel’s genocide, Harris’ response was “I’m speaking.” It’s hard to imagine a better example of Democrats showing themselves as self-important, uncaring, and entitled than that response. In effect, Harris told everyone who cares about Palestine to just shut up about genocide and defer to her. 

Harris undermined her own appeal

Harris’ consistent defense of genocide undermined the messages she was trying to win with. 

Harris’ main campaign point was how awful Donald Trump is going to be. She’s not wrong, even when it comes to Middle East policy. But it’s a meaningless argument when the ostensibly “lesser evil” is a full partner in the most brutal, sadistic, and massive genocide of the 21st century. That’s a lesser evil that is too awful to support. 

Harris’ policy strengths were women’s rights and LGBTQIA rights. The latter was downplayed throughout her campaign even though Trump was going after sexual and gender minorities in the most hateful way imaginable. 

But her stance on women’s rights, which was prominent throughout the campaign, was undermined by Harris’ approach to Gaza. How, people asked, can she legitimately argue for reproductive freedom, for the right for women to control their own bodies when she is supporting a military onslaught that has made it impossible for women to get pre- or post-natal care, to care for themselves while pregnant, or to care for newborn infants? Worse, how could she argue for women’s rights when she was so enthusiastic about killing civilians in Gaza that she was depriving women of the most basic right: the right to live?

Harris tried to sell a “campaign of joy,” contrasting it with Trump’s campaign of grievances and hate. For the sycophantic “Blue no matter who” crowd, this might have been effective. But for the voters she was trying to win over, Harris’ message was tone deaf. Where was the joy in Palestine? How can we claim to rejoice in our politics when the politician we are supposed to be backing is a full partner in genocide? That is unacceptable to anyone with a conscience. 

But I thought voters don’t vote based on foreign policy?

Those of us who have made foreign policy our careers know very well that Americans rarely pay any attention to our foreign policy and never vote on that basis unless U.S. troops are being killed overseas in significant numbers, as they were in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Vietnam.

Gaza and Palestine haven’t precisely changed that. While Palestine solidarity activists certainly weighed Gaza and Lebanon very heavily in their voting, few people, relatively speaking, voted based solely on the genocide in Gaza. 

But, because of the depth of American involvement, the horror of the brutal massacres Israel is committing on a daily basis, and, crucially, the extent to which people can see this unfolding on their phones, Gaza became a symbol for the lack of substance among the Democrats and their manifest policy failures. The Democrats’ response to the horror their own constituents have expressed at what we are doing in Gaza produced a revulsion that alienated many voters. 

Protests against the genocide have included much more visible participation and statements of support from national groups, like the NAACP and trade unions. AIPAC has become the symbol of everything wrong with American politics, lobbying, and campaign financing. 

Kamala Harris’s campaign completely missed this reality. The result was that her support among 18-29 year old voters dropped from Biden’s 60% in 2020 to 55% while Trump’s support surged from 36% in 2020 to 42% this year, largely on the strength of how many voters in that age group simply didn’t vote for either candidate.

Gaza was the most visible issue that created frustration and disillusionment with the Democrats and suppressed turnout in support of Kamala Harris, but it was not the only one.

Everything about Harris’s attitude toward Palestine and Palestinians contributed to a broader sense of hopelessness. Palestine solidarity activists could vote for Harris, but she sent the message that nothing would improve even if they did. So they didn’t.

Gaza was the most visible issue that created the frustration and disillusionment with the Democrats that suppressed turnout in support of Kamala Harris, but it was not the only one. Democrats’ draconian stance on immigration was another factor. The minimization of the struggles that people have making ends meet from month to month, where Democrats kept telling those people that they were too stupid to understand how good the economy really was and burying the reality that it was still very bad for the majority of Americans was likely the single biggest factor

Gaza became the symbol for all of these failures. In no regard was Harris’s unwillingness to listen to her own constituents clearer. The 77% of Democrats who want a ceasefire also know the United States can get one by demanding it from Israel on pain of stopping the arms flow. Harris’s gaslighting on this issue, claiming that they were “working for a ceasefire” when it is quite clear they are unwilling to take any substantive action toward one, highlighted her shallowness on other issues. 

More than that, it highlighted a dearth of ethics and empathy for unimaginable suffering. That was supposed to be what differentiated her from Trump. Instead, Harris demonstrated that she was just as cynical and heartless as Trump is, she just wasn’t going to be so open about it. 

Harris was unwilling to even pretend to care about the people of Gaza or about the votes of Palestinian, Muslim, and Arab Americans. 

It would have been a simple matter to accommodate the Uncommitted Movement and have a moderate Palestinian speaker at the DNC. Some pro-Israel groups might have objected, but it would have gone away quickly, and no one was going to cut off their donations, much less divert them to Republicans, in response. But Harris said no.

Harris was handed an opportunity by Biden’s own Secretaries of Defense and State when they issued their letter warning Israel to get into compliance with U.S. law. Of course, everyone knew it was a bluff and Israel, rather than ignoring it, doubled down on its barring of food and humanitarian aid in Gaza. 

But Harris could have made a public statement supporting the statement and say that as president she would expect all countries to abide by these provisions of U.S. law. Most of us would be extremely skeptical of the truth of such a statement, but it would at least have provided some hope that she might at least be a little better than Biden.

Harris wasn’t interested in giving the slightest nod to progressives. She refused to even hint that there might be a reason to vote for her beyond her not being Trump when it comes to the Middle East. That refusal was a symbol for her failures on other issues that have personal resonance for many American voters. 

So she didn’t get the progressive votes that she made no effort to secure, and she lost. Gaza was far from the only reason. But it was a meaningful part of the explanation, and it was emblematic of the train wreck of a campaign that left us with an authoritarian president that presents a danger to the entire world. 

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Article in today’s Guardian/Observer on the film No other Land, a joint project of Israeli and Palestinian film makers, Basel Adra, a Palestinian activist, and Yuval Abraham, an Israeli journalist, which won two best documentary awards at the Berlin International Film Festival.

The pair believes the only realistic hope for the region is pressure for change from outside, particularly from the US. However, there too they feel profound disillusionment with the Biden administration, which has complained from time to time about the treatment of Palestinians but has continued to send weapons and pledge unwavering American support for Israel.

The two men were talking before the US presidential election. Given the choice on offer, Abraham saw Kamala Harris as the lesser of two evils, but like many Palestinians, Adra argued that nothing could be worse than the Biden-Harris administration, which had continued to supply Israel with bombs in the face of the razing of Gaza and the deaths of more than 43,000 people.

“Trump is bad but Trump did not do to us what the Democrats did to us,”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/nov/09/no-other-land-israeli-palestinian-film-makers-west-bank-violence

Lebanese, Palestinian, Muslim voters aren’t stupid. They know what Trump means by saying that Israel should finish the job. But Trump didn’t betray them. The Democrats did. They expected more of the Democrats.

Scratch a liberal – Harris supporters turn fascist at Arab-Americans, Hispanic community over Trump win
It seems Harris’s support for Israel’s genocide runs through her fan base too…Supporters of failed US presidential candidate Kamala Harris have been venting their racist and genocidal spleens after she lost to criminal candidate Donald Trump this week.
Rather than examine their candidate’s and their own attitudes and how she managed to fall millions of votes short of even outgoing president Joe Biden’s 2020 performance – and especially to ask why so many felt they couldn’t vote for a woman who gave unequivocal support to Israel’s political and military ends in the middle of its genocide of hundreds of thousands of Palestinian civilians, overwhelmingly women and children – many have taken their masks off to reveal an ugly reality beneath, as the examples below, collated by US group ‘United Liberation Front for Palestine, show.
Many wished for the complete destruction of Gaza under Trump, as if Harris’s position was any different from the Biden regime of which she is part, which has enabled, funded, armed and provided political cover for Israel’s slaughter in Gaza as well as trying to threaten Lebanon into ceding its sovereignty to Israel. Some even thought it would be ‘funny’ to kill every living thing in Gaza:

https://skwawkbox.org/2024/11/10/scratch-a-liberal-harris-supporters-turn-fascist-at-arab-americans-hispanic-community-over-trump-win/

A very good article in today’s (Nov 11) Guardian from Nesrine Malik, on how Gaza helped cause the Democrats’ loss last week.

In Dearborn, Michigan, the largest majority Arab American city, Joe Biden won in 2020 with around 70% of the vote. Early stats indicate that Harris received something like 40% of the vote. As concerns over the war were raised loudly and specifically, Harris not only continued to ignore and isolate these voices, but also the campaign sent Bill Clinton out to shush them. Harris never even visited the city. But guess who did? That’s right, Donald Trump. And now he’s won in Dearborn and taken all of Michigan.

“Even if he will continue this genocide at a 99% chance,” one voter who cast her ballot for Trump said, “I’m going to take that 1% chance that he’s going to stop it, as opposed to the 100% chance that it’s going to continue under Harris.”

[…]

There has been a foolish belief on the part of Democrats that you can place loyal voters under extreme duress and still expect their votes – a belief entrenched by the fact that they saw in their opponent a helpful scarecrow who is explicitly racist, nihilistic, Islamophobic, and anti-democratic. But the voters the party has lost understand that the Democrats are, implicitly, all of those things too.

[…]

Because ultimately for the Democrats, the same moral vacuum that has enabled and allowed the slaughter in Gaza to continue is the same one that prevents them from seeing voters as ethical beings. The realpolitik attitude that weighed up Palestinian lives against loyalty to Israel is the same one that cannot conceive voters who do not also act in similarly cold and self-interested ways.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/11/kamal-harris-gaza-democrats-arab-american-voters-donald-trump