A House vote on Israel's 'right to exist' divides 'Squad' members
Of the eight members that make up the radical left group, Representatives Rashida Tlaib and Cori Bush decided to reject the resolutions.
The anti-Semitism of some of the members of the Democratic squad of the House of Representatives was evident in the votes on resolutions to reaffirm Israel's "right to exist" and condemn the attacks of the Hamas terrorist group against the Israeli population.
Resolution 888 (H. Res. 888) focused on Israel's "right to exist" and H. Res. 793 condemned the attacks by Hamas terrorists on October 7 against the Israeli population (both were approved).
Of the eight members that make up the radical squad, representative Rashida Tlaib voted "present" and refused - in this way - to recognize Israel's "right to exist." But he changed his previous argument and chose to condemn the terrorist group's attacks. On the other hand, Representative Cori Bush decided not to vote on any of the resolutions.
Israel by Veronica Silveri on Scribd
After the vote, Tlaib declared to Fox in a statement that "both Israelis and Palestinians have the right to live in democracy, security, peace and human dignity" and referred to the approved resolutions:
The Resolution "equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism"
Republican Rep. Thomas Massie, was the only House member to vote against H. Res. 888, citing language within the resolution. In his words: "It equates anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism. Anti-Semitism is deplorable, but expanding it to include criticism of Israel is not helpful."