Headlines:Biden, AOC Address Night 1 of DNC as Palestinian Rights Activists Shine Light on Gaza Genocideby Amy Goodman
DemocracyNow!
Aug 20, 2024
President Biden took to the stage on the first night of the Democratic National Convention Monday, where he “passed the torch” to Vice President Kamala Harris.
President Joe Biden: “Selecting Kamala was the very first decision I made before I became — when I became our nominee. And it was the best decision I made my whole career.”
A few minutes into Biden’s remarks, protesters dropped a sign that read “Stop Arming Israel.” The sign was quickly wrestled away from the protesters. We’ll speak to three activists involved in last night’s actions in hour two of our live DNC broadcast. The DNC on Monday evening voted to adopt the party’s official platform, which does not call for an arms embargo on Israel and reasserts unwavering U.S. support for Israel.
Among other high-profile speakers Monday night was New York Congressmember Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: “We have a chance to elect a president who is for the middle class because she is from the middle class. She understands the urgency of rent checks and groceries and prescriptions. She is as committed to our reproductive and civil rights as she is to taking on corporate greed. And she is working tirelessly to secure a ceasefire in Gaza and bringing hostages home.”
AOC’s speech came after her fellow Squad members, Cori Bush and Jamaal Bowman, recently lost their House seats after AIPAC poured tens of millions of dollars into their primary challengers’ campaigns.
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Protesters “March on the DNC” Amid Heavy Police Presence, Arrestsby Amy Goodman
DemocracyNow!
Aug 20, 2024
Thousands of protesters took to the streets Monday as part of the “March on the DNC.” Nick Tilsen is an Oglala Lakota leader and president of the NDN Collective.
Nick Tilsen: “I’m here to remind America that this election is happening on the stolen lands of Indigenous people. And the Land Back movement stands in solidarity with a free Palestine and to end all military aid to the state of Israel and to stop the genocide.”
Amid heavy police presence, a group of protesters broke off from the main march and headed to the United Center, where they breached a security fence as they chanted “Whose streets? Our streets!” before police began to make arrests. We’ll hear more voices from the March on the DNC later in the broadcast.
During a separate action Monday, Cheri Honkala with the Poor People’s Army was also arrested near the United Center after she crossed a police line as she attempted to walk into the DNC to deliver a citizen’s arrest warrant for Democratic leaders the Poor People’s Army has accused of crimes against humanity. This is Honkala speaking before her arrest.
Cheri Honkala: “Either arrest me or let me continue to walk.
Police officer 1: “OK. OK. Continue push against us, and you will.”
Cheri Honkala: “Am I under arrest? If I’m not, I will continue to walk.”
Police officer 2: “Make sure you get that on camera, too.”
Police officer 3: “You’re not going that way.”
Cheri Honkala: “You do not have a right to beat or hurt me. I’m asking you.”
Honkala led a similar action in Milwaukee last month, the site of the Republican National Convention, where she was also arrested. Several members of the Poor People’s Army walked from Milwaukee to Chicago ahead of the DNC.
Blinken Says Netanyahu Agreed to Ceasefire Proposal, But Israel Continues Its Genocidal War in GazaAug 20, 2024
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu accepted a U.S. proposal that would bridge remaining differences in achieving a Gaza ceasefire, and urged Hamas to do the same. Hamas called out the hypocrisy of Blinken’s announcement and repeated its demand that any deal must result in a permanent end to Israel’s war on Gaza, and accused the U.S. of “merely buying time for Israel to continue its genocide” by watering down a previous agreement. Despite the news from Blinken, who is now in Egypt to garner support for the deal, Israel’s carnage in Gaza continues unabated. The U.N. warned Monday Israel is now “relentlessly” striking the besieged territory, with almost all Gazans displaced and some resorting to living among the rubble amid Israel’s barrage of evacuation orders.
In Khan Younis, distraught family members gathered at the Nasser Hospital morgue after Israeli strikes earlier today killed at least 11 people, including children. This is researcher and professor Iyad Abu Mustafa, speaking outside the hospital.
Iyad Abu Mustafa: “The occupying state continues to carry out brutal operations day after day. Yesterday, 18 martyrs were killed, and this morning, more than 10 martyrs. The number of martyrs has reached more than 44,000 martyrs. This escalation indicates a crime of genocide, a well-organized crime. Every bloodbath is a crime in itself. There is no country in the world that is able to stop these serious violations against the Palestinian people. The United States is still taking the neutral stance and is blindly biased toward the occupying Israeli state.”
Meanwhile, Israel says it retrieved the bodies of six hostages from Khan Younis overnight. The families of hostages have been calling on Netanyahu to work toward a ceasefire in Gaza for months.
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Thousands March on DNC in Chicago to Demand End to War on Gazaby Amy Goodman
DemocracyNow!
Aug 20, 2024
On the opening day of the Democratic National Convention, Democracy Now! was on the streets of Chicago during the March on the DNC as thousands of protesters held a rally and march to call on Joe Biden, Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party to end U.S. support for Israel amid its ongoing assault on Gaza. We bring you the voices of some of the protesters.
TranscriptThis is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: The Democratic National Convention opened on Monday with speeches by top officials of the Democratic Party, including an unscheduled appearance on stage by Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden wrapping up the night with a 50-minute address.
Earlier in the day, thousands of protesters took to the streets to voice their opposition to Israel’s war on Gaza and to call on Biden, Harris and the Democratic Party to end U.S. support for the war. Demonstrators gathered in Union Park for a rally before setting off on a march through the streets amidst a heavy police presence. A few dozen protesters broke away from the larger group and marched toward the United Center, the site of the DNC, and tore down parts of the security fence. Several protesters who managed to get through the fence were detained and handcuffed by police. Protests are scheduled in Chicago every day this week for the DNC.
AMY GOODMAN: Democracy Now! was on the streets yesterday covering the March on the DNC. These are some of the voices of those protesters.
ABLA ABDELKADER: We all come together to say one thing: We want humanity to take priority over profit. We want people to come together. Our front is united. It’s stronger than it’s ever been. I don’t think I’ve ever seen as diverse a protest in my life, and I’ve been to — I’ve been going since I was little. And seeing all these different flags, all these different faces, all these different flyers, holding up signs for queer liberation, for Black liberation, for workers’ rights, for disabled people rights, it’s extremely empowering.
And I think that frightens the white supremacy cushion that our elected officials have been sitting on. They’re losing their power, and they realize that with our tie to solidarity and our united front continuing to build and become more unwavering, it’s only a matter of time until their time is up and we begin to speak. As Kamala Harris said she’s speaking, well, we’re speaking now, and we’re making sure you hear us that you’re not going to get away with killing, the killing of hundreds of thousands of people, not just in Palestine, but just wreaking havoc all over the Global South and on all minority communities.
PROTESTERS: Occupation no more! Five, six, seven, eight!
NICK TILSEN: My name is Nick Tilsen. I’m Oglala Lakota. I’m the president and CEO of NDN Collective. We’re an international Indigenous rights organization dedicated to building Indigenous power. And I’m from Pine Ridge, Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. And I’m here. I’m here to remind America that this election is happening on the stolen lands of Indigenous people. And the Land Back movement stands in solidarity with a free Palestine and to end all military aid to the state of Israel and to stop the genocide.
GILLIAN RATH: We’re here today. We, as SDS, have been launching a long campaign for divestments on our campus, so demanding that our administration divests from countries complicit in war crimes, and that includes Israel, and weapons manufacturing companies. But we’re also here as Minnesota residents saying that we want to hold our Democratic politicians accountable, and that now includes Tim Walz. And we’ve actually been protesting Walz for years and years. He’s the chair of the State Board of Investments in Minnesota, so he’s responsible for investing Minnesota tax dollars. And they — him personally, with the SBI, invests currently $3.2 billion into Israeli companies that are complicit in genocide. And I was actually arrested on Walz’s front lawn for protesting this exact thing before he was even announced that he was the VP nominee.
JASPER NORDIN: My name is Jasper Nordin. I’m a UPS Teamster Local 638 Minneapolis. I’m also with Minnesota Workers United. I get really annoyed when Republicans are like, “Tim Walz is a super far-left radical.” Like, I assure you he’s not. He sent out the National Guard to beat up protesters after the George Floyd riots in 2020. He has continually ignored people calling for Minnesota to divest its investments in Israel, in its genocide.
PROTESTERS: ¡El pueblo unido jamás será vencido!
MARI MANSFIELD: Mari with MIRAC, the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee. The same company, Elbit Systems, that created the wall in Gaza, created and has funded and designed the wall at our southern border in Mexico, that uses both wall and then — and what they’re calling smart wall technology, surveillance towers, drone systems. And so, there is a pretty direct link between Palestine and Gaza, because the same business of oppression is being used in both places.
MARÍA TARACENA: And what is your response? It seems like Kamala Harris is trying to prove that she’s tougher on border security than Trump in order to garner more support. What are your thoughts on that strategy?
MARI MANSFIELD: Border security is a lost cause. Border security is an illusion. There is no such thing as a safe border. This wall is impossible. We are spending millions and millions of dollars at something that will never be completed and will never make us safe. Most crime, most drugs coming through the border come through legal ports of entry, and they are aided by Custom and Border Patrol agents. So, Kamala, her position is just to continue the same, which is pushing our money, our tax dollars, into a system that will never work for any of us.
CLAUDIA DE LA CRUZ: My name is Claudia De la Cruz, and I’m the presidential candidate for the Party for Socialism and Liberation. We are here to make it clear that the people of the United States are not represented in that DNC. That DNC convention is a coronation of war criminals. And we are here to say that it is not with our consent that they are continuing to fund and provide weapons to the war criminals of the state, colonial state, of Israel. We’re here to say that they have enough business in the United States to take care of, that does not — does not require for them to go across the globe waging war. We are here to say that we need a price freeze on essential goods. We are here to say that the urgency our communities need to be covered with housing, with healthcare, but instead they’re spending trillions of dollars on bombing babies, and it is not with our consent. And we demand not only to be heard, but to have political and economic decision-making power in this so-called democracy.
PROTESTERS: Palestine will live forever! Palestine will live forever!
AMY GOODMAN: Some of the voices from the thousands in the streets of Chicago at the March on the DNC protest. Special thanks to Messiah Rhodes, María Taracena, Sam Alcoff and Hana Elias.
When we come back, we go inside the convention for the first-ever panel on Palestinian human rights at the DNC. Stay with us.
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First-Ever DNC Panel on Palestinian Rights: We Need to “Restore the Soul of the Democratic Party”by Amy Goodman
DemocracyNow!
Aug 20, 2024
https://www.democracynow.org/2024/8/20/ ... transcriptThis year, the Democratic National Convention held its first-ever panel on Palestinian human rights. The panel came after persistent grassroots organizing against U.S. support for Israel’s assault on Gaza. We play excerpts, including from the Arab American Institute’s James Zogby, a former executive member of the Democratic National Committee; Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, a pediatric intensive care surgeon who recently worked in Gaza; and Layla Elabed, co-chair of the Uncommitted National Movement.
Later that day, during President Biden’s convention speech, protesters standing near the Florida delegation unfolded a banner proclaiming “Stop Arming Israel.” Democracy Now was at the scene. We speak with one of the protesting delegates, Liano Sharon, an elected DNC delegate from Michigan, as he was escorted off the convention floor. Sharon, who is Jewish, told Democracy Now! that he participated in the action because “'never again' means never again for anyone, anywhere, ever, period.”
TranscriptThis is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, “War, Peace and the Presidency: Breaking with Convention.” I’m Amy Goodman, here in Chicago with Juan González.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, the opening day of the Democratic convention on Monday featured the first-ever panel on Palestinian human rights at the DNC. The panel was announced just a day earlier and came after persistent grassroots organizing against U.S. support for Israel’s assault on Gaza.
AMY GOODMAN: The panel was moderated by Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and featured former Michigan Congressmember Andy Levin; Hala Hijazi, a Democratic organizer and fundraiser who’s had over 100 family members killed in Gaza; Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, a pediatric intensive care surgeon who served in Gaza many times; Layla Elabed, the co-chair of the “uncommitted” movement; and James Zogby, a former longtime executive member of the Democratic National Committee and the founder of the Arab American Institute. Zogby began by speaking about the significance of the first-ever panel on Palestinian rights being held at the DNC.
JAMES ZOGBY: I have been doing this for most of my life, like 50 years. And I remember when we couldn’t get the issue of Palestine discussed at the Coalition for a New Foreign and Military Policy, that was all the left groups, because they said, “If you let the Arabs in, we’ll lose our credibility.” And when the anniversary of Dr. King’s march happened, again, we were invited to be on the steering committee, and they said, “Eh, if you let the Arabs in, it’ll hurt our credibility.” And so we were asked to leave.
Jesse Jackson made all the difference in the world, because he elevated the issue, and he elevated those of us who raised the issue. And the last two times — the only two times — that the word “Palestine” was mentioned at a Democratic convention was 1984 and 1988 with Jesse Jackson, when — when he spoke in his speech about it, and he invited me first to give him a nominating speech, where I talked about justice for Palestinians. And then, in ’88, we had a platform fight, an actual platform debate from the podium of the convention, on justice for Palestinians.
So, we’ve come a long way. People say to me, “Well, you’re just being optimistic. You’re just saying, you know, 'Cup is half full.'” I say, “No, I remember when we didn’t have a cup.” And we are now with a cup and filling it up. So, when I look at this panel today, it is not the prize. The prize is a change in policy. That’s the prize. …
But what’s historic here is that we are having an officially sanctioned panel to talk about it. Like I said, it’s not the main prize. It’s not the big prize. But it is something I do not want to dismiss for a minute as to how significant this is, about what message the Harris campaign is sending by saying, “We want to talk about this and hear you talk about it.”
And so, I’ve heard some grumbling, you know? I quote Willie Barrow, a friend of mine from the Jackson campaign in the '80s, who said, “We ain't never been here before.” She’d say, “We ain’t never been here.” We’ve never had this forum before. And it is not, like I said, the end. It’s the beginning of a process.
And the difference is — and I told this to Layla and Abbas last night — that when we raised it in '84 and ’88, we did so because Jesse Jackson enabled us. It was a top down. There were people in our Jackson coalition who were, “Reverend, you sure you want to do this? Are you sure you want to talk about this?” He said, “Damn it, I'm doing it. I’ve been doing it from the beginning. We’re not backing away.” This is different. No candidate elevated this movement. This was a bottom up. This was Abbas. This was Layla. This was Waleed. This was activists across the country who said, “We’re not taking it.”
And part of recognition of that is that we’re having a forum, a recognized one. I’ve been to a lot of the forums since this day has begun. You know, I’ve been to a number of these sessions. This is the largest audience I’ve seen for any one of them. Right?
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was James Zogby, the former longtime executive member of the Democratic National Committee and the founder of the Arab American Institute. One of the most emotional parts of the panel came during comments by Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, a pediatric intensive care surgeon who has been to Gaza several times over the past 10 months with the aid group Doctors Without Borders and other groups. She spoke about some of what she witnessed in Gaza.
DR. TANYA HAJ-HASSAN: For the past 10 months, we have witnessed civilian massacre after civilian massacre — school massacres where internally displaced people were sheltering, the flour massacre, massacres of people trying to collect water, massacres of people collecting aid at aid sites — massacre after civilian massacre, entire families exterminated in one single bomb; humanitarians, healthcare workers killed and journalists killed at record — in record numbers; pediatric amputations, amputations in children that are breaking records; over 17,000 children who have lost one or both parents since October in Gaza.
We have treated so many children who have lost their entire family that it has — a term has been coined to describe these children — you’ve probably heard it — “wounded child, no surviving family,” WCNSF. This is a term that has been coined since October to describe this very frequent phenomenon that I personally witnessed more times than I can count while I was there. For children — I have held the hand of children who are taking their last gasps, because their entire family was killed in the same attack and couldn’t be there holding their hand and comforting them, and could not bury them thereafter.
For the children who I treated who were discharged, they were — and survived, they face a Russian roulette of a hundred ways that they will likely and potentially die when they leave the hospital due to the circumstances incompatible with life that have been architectured by this military assault: direct bombing, starvation, dehydration, disease, alarming reports of the first cases of polio in Gaza right now. Polio is a potentially deadly disease that causes paralysis, including paralysis of the muscles needed to breathe. That has been eradicated for decades in that region. There has been a polio vaccination campaign that essentially has eradicated the disease from the majority of the world. And now we’re seeing cases emerging in a area of the world that cannot — that has a healthcare system that has been completely and entirely annihilated.
I mentioned these wounded children with no surviving family. I’m going to give you two quick stories, just so that you can humanize what I mean when I say this, because I know it’s really hard to hear these numbers and think about individuals and what this means to them.
I received a young boy into the emergency department during one of the mass casualties who had half of his face and neck blown off. Luckily, the organs that are vital for breathing and blood supply to the brain were preserved. They were visible, but preserved. And he was talking to us. He couldn’t see himself, so he didn’t know what he looked like at that point in time, and he kept asking for his sister. His sister was in the bed next to him. The majority of her body was burned beyond recognition. He didn’t recognize that the girl in the bed next to him was his sister. His entire family, parents and the rest of his siblings, were killed in the same attack.
That boy survived. And the next day, I went to see him. A very young plastic surgeon, one of the few remaining plastic surgeons in Gaza, because the others have either been killed or have fled, understandably, had removed part of his chest and created a graft to cover those vital organs of the neck. He was lying in his bed and mumbling, because it was so difficult to talk. And he kept saying — I got really close to him, and he said, “I wish I had died, too.” And I said, “What?” And he said, “I think my entire family has gone to heaven” — or, it’s not “my entire family.” His exact words were something to the effect of, “Everybody I love is now in heaven. I don’t want to be here anymore.” That is one of so many stories. I’m giving you — I’m so sorry, Layla, but I think people need to hear this. I’m giving you the story of one child.
One of my healthcare worker colleagues, a young nurse, one of the most dedicated nurses I’ve ever met, was trying to evacuate a patient when Al-Shifa Hospital was bombed, from north to south. He carried that patient, was eventually called by Israeli forces, not by name, but by uniform: “You, the person in scrubs, come here.” He was subsequently detained for 53 days. He reported physical, sexual and psychological torture while in detention, and ultimately released because he had no crime.
After he was released, he worked constantly, because, one, he was so dedicated, and, two, he suffered from severe insomnia from the trauma of his detention. He was always in the resuscitation room of the emergency department, cleaning out sand from the eyes of people pulled from under the rubble, trying to comfort them. One day, overnight, he fell asleep holding the body of a dead child still with a breathing tube in after they had failed to resuscitate the infant.
Another day, I asked him to go home, because he hadn’t slept in so many hours. So he left the hospital. Couple hours later, I see him in the emergency department trying to resuscitate a man whose arms and leg — sorry, whose both legs and one arm had been blown off. I asked him what he was doing in the hospital. “I thought you went home to rest.” And he said, “This is my sister’s husband. They woke me up to tell me that the aid distribution site had been bombed, and my sister’s husband had gone there. So I went to find him, and found him severely injured.” So I helped him resuscitate this patient. His home has been destroyed. He’s a young man. He’s engaged. He’s trying to get married. He had a whole life ahead of him, and he was a very dedicated healthcare worker.
I’m giving you two stories, a child and a healthcare worker, but these are representative of literally almost everybody I know in Gaza. I don’t know a single healthcare worker who has not lost multiple members of their family.
So, as the U.S. continues to fund this military campaign unconditionally, and somewhat blindly, in stark contrast to documented realities on the ground, in stark contrast to the findings of the International Court of Justice of plausible genocide, and in stark contrast to the universal, global condemnation of humanitarian and human rights organizations, we have no choice but to exert as much pressure as possible and use all the leverage we can to change direction, the direction that this country is taking.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Dr. Tanya Haj-Hassan, a pediatric intensive care surgeon who’s volunteered in Gaza hospitals a number of times. Layla Elabed, the co-chair of the Uncommitted National Movement, who was seated right next to her, was overcome with emotion and briefly walked out during Haj-Hassan’s comments. Layla Elabed later responded to a question about the plans for the uncommitted movement between now and November.
LAYLA ELABED: We stand at a very crucial moment for our party. The Democratic Party, the party of my father, the party that has stood up for justice, is being tested. Will it rise for the occasion and stand for the values that it was built on — freedom, equality, justice — or will it remain silent in the face of unimaginable suffering? If we remain silent, and we become complicit. But if we stand up and demand action, an arms embargo, a ceasefire, an end to war, we may have an opportunity to restore the soul of the Democratic Party and unite us under a big tent.
The Listen to Michigan and the Uncommitted National Movement is in the fight for the soul of the Democratic Party. I want to quote Fannie Lou Hamer, who wasn’t allowed to speak from the stage at the 1964 Democratic National Convention because of her identity: “I question America. Is this America, the land of the free and the home of the brave?” All we are doing right now is in the tradition of Fannie Lou Hamer and the Mississippi Freedom Party and the civil rights movement of the 1964 Democratic Party convention: bringing moral witness to the most powerful political party in the world to listen to voices deeply impacted by our U.S. policy decisions.
We aren’t that different from any other movement, from unions, civil rights, gay marriage, reproductive rights or climate justice. We are fighting to be recognized, to be part of this party. And we are fighting for this party to believe in our equal rights. Hala and I shouldn’t have to stand up here and tell you the suffering of our family members for Democrats and for this administration and for Vice President Harris to want to do the moral and right thing to do.
AMY GOODMAN: Layla Elabed is co-chair of the uncommitted movement, speaking at the first-ever panel on Palestinian human rights here at the DNC. This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, “War, Peace and the Presidency: Breaking with Convention.” I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: On Monday night, President Biden headlined the opening night of the Democratic National Convention. Biden’s speech came less than a month after he announced he ended his reelection campaign, paving the way for Vice President Kamala Harris’s nomination. On Monday night, Biden briefly spoke about Israel’s war on Gaza.
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: We’re working around the clock, my secretary of state, to prevent a wider war and reunite hostages with their families and surge humanitarian health and food assistance into Gaza now, to end the civilian suffering of the Palestinian people and finally, finally, finally deliver a ceasefire and end this war. … Those protesters out in the street, they have a point. A lot of innocent people are being killed, on both sides.
AMY GOODMAN: A few minutes into President Biden’s remarks, three delegates, part of Delegates Against Genocide, dropped a banner that read “Stop Arming Israel.” We were inside the convention floor right next to the Florida delegation, where it happened. While some delegates snatched the banner away, many others of the Florida delegation quickly raised Joe Biden placards that said “Thank you, Joe” and “We love Joe” to block any view of the banner. The protesting delegates who dropped the banner were quickly escorted from the convention floor by security. We’re going to go to that moment inside the convention on opening night.
BIDEN SUPPORTERS: Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe!
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: I wasn’t looking in the past. I was looking in the future.
DELEGATE: We have a right. We have a right. We have a right.
BIDEN SUPPORTERS: We love Joe! We love Joe! We love Joe!
BIDEN SUPPORTER 1: Get him out. He’s threatening her. He’s threatening her. Get him out.
AMY GOODMAN: Sir? Sir? Sir?
BIDEN SUPPORTER 2: Ma’am, we’re trying to listen to the president.
AMY GOODMAN: What are you doing?
BIDEN SUPPORTER 2: We’re trying to listen to the president. Sir, you are committing assault.
LIANO SHARON: I’m trying to protest.
BIDEN SUPPORTER 3: We’re trying to listen to the president.
LIANO SHARON: I’m trying to protest the murder of children in Gaza. I’m trying to protest. [inaudible] This is the only way [inaudible] America is through protest.
AMY GOODMAN: What’s your name, sir? Sir, what’s your name?
LIANO SHARON: My name’s Liano Sharon. I’m a DNC delegate from Michigan.
SECURITY GUARD: Can we wait 'til you're downstairs?
AMY GOODMAN: And what did you do today?
LIANO SHARON: Today, we held up a sign protesting the murder of children in Gaza and the continuing genocide.
SECURITY GUARD: Watch your step. Watch your step.
REPORTER: What did the sign say?
LIANO SHARON: It said “Stop Arming Israel.”
SECURITY GUARD: All right, thank you. Let’s keep it going. [inaudible]
REPORTER: What was your name, sir?
LIANO SHARON: Liano Sharon.
AMY GOODMAN: And what happened then?
SECURITY GUARD: Let’s get into the tunnel. You can interview him in the tunnel. OK?
AMY GOODMAN: And what happened next?
SECURITY GUARD: I just don’t want you to break your ankles.
LIANO SHARON: Then the people behind us grabbed a hold of the sign and tried to rip it out of our hands several times. Eventually, they succeeded.
SECURITY GUARD: Interview in the hall, OK? Let’s get him down. All right, thanks for being cooperative, sir.
LIANO SHARON: Yeah, no problem.
SECURITY GUARD: OK. Thank you.
AMY GOODMAN: And why did — and why did you do it?
LIANO SHARON: I did that because we are currently funding a genocide.
BIDEN SUPPORTER 4: Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe!
LIANO SHARON: And we need to — and it needs to stop. And also, I want to — I want to make it clear to the Harris campaign that this is actually in their interest. Netanyahu is trying to instigate a larger war so he can remain in power and avoid going to prison. In order to move Netanyahu off of his current position of trying to expand the war in order to stay in power and remain out of jail, we believe that the U.S. needs to stop arming Israel, needs to have an embargo against their — against their genocide. Otherwise, Netanyahu doesn’t have the incentive to stop the genocide, to stop the mass murder.
AMY GOODMAN: Why does this matter to you so much?
LIANO SHARON: It matters to me so much because I’m a Jew and I was always brought up to believe that “never again” means never again for anyone, anywhere, ever, period. And that’s not what’s happening right now. What’s happening right now is that we are continuing to fund and support an ongoing genocide, the mass murder of children. And it needs to stop.
AMY GOODMAN: Voices from inside the Democratic National Convention Monday night during President Biden’s remarks. Special thanks to Sam Alcoff, Hany Massoud and Nermeen Shaikh. It was when three of the delegates, part of a group called Delegates Against Genocide, dropped a banner that read “Stop Arming Israel.” We’ll speak with all three delegates in our other hour of “War, Peace and the Presidency: Breaking with Convention.” Stay tuned.
When we come back, we look at the life and legacy of pioneering TV host Phil Donahue. Stay with us.
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Muslim, Immigrant & Jewish Delegates Unfurl “Stop Arming Israel” Banner During Biden DNC Speechby Amy Goodman
DemocracyNow!
Aug 20, 2024
https://www.democracynow.org/2024/8/20/ ... transcriptDuring President Biden’s speech on the first night of the DNC, protesters briefly unfurled a banner that read “Stop Arming Israel,” before it was wrested away by convention staff. We speak to three members of the group Delegates Against Genocide who organized and carried out the action: Esam Boraey, a human rights activist and delegate from Connecticut; Florida DNC member Nadia Ahmad; and progressive Jewish activist Liano Sharon, an elected delegate from Michigan. “We were there specifically to confront President Joe Biden,” says Ahmad, explaining why the protesters chose to disrupt Biden’s speech. “He’s the one who can stop this genocide by picking up the phone and making a phone call, and he has chosen not to do that.”
TranscriptThis is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, “War, Peace and the Presidency: Breaking with Convention.” I’m Amy Goodman, here with Juan González in Chicago.
On Monday night, President Biden headlined the opening night of the Democratic National Convention. A few minutes into his remarks, three delegates unfurled a banner that read “Stop Arming Israel.” The action took place where the Florida delegation was sitting. While some other delegates snatched the banner away, many delegates quickly raised Joe Biden placards that read “Thank you, Joe” and “I love Joe” to block any view of the banner. More and more of those placards were brought out to cover the banner as much as possible. The protesting delegates who unfurled that banner were quickly escorted from the convention floor by security. Democracy Now! was nearby when it happened.
BIDEN SUPPORTERS: Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe!
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN: I wasn’t looking in the past. I was looking in the future.
DELEGATE: We have a right. We have a right. We have a right.
BIDEN SUPPORTERS: We love Joe! We love Joe! We love Joe!
BIDEN SUPPORTER 1: Get him out. He’s threatening her. He’s threatening her. Get him out.
AMY GOODMAN: Sir? Sir? Sir?
BIDEN SUPPORTER 2: Ma’am, we’re trying to listen to the president.
AMY GOODMAN: What are you doing?
BIDEN SUPPORTER 2: We’re trying to listen to the president. Sir, you are committing assault.
LIANO SHARON: I’m trying to protest.
BIDEN SUPPORTER 3: We’re trying to listen to the president.
LIANO SHARON: I’m trying to protest the murder of children in Gaza. I’m trying to protest. [inaudible] This is the only way [inaudible] America is through protest.
AMY GOODMAN: What’s your name, sir? Sir, what’s your name?
LIANO SHARON: My name’s Liano Sharon. I’m a DNC delegate from Michigan.
SECURITY GUARD: Can we wait 'til you're downstairs?
AMY GOODMAN: And what did you do today?
LIANO SHARON: Today, we held up a sign protesting the murder of children in Gaza and the continuing genocide.
SECURITY GUARD: Watch your step. Watch your step.
REPORTER: What did the sign say?
LIANO SHARON: It said “Stop Arming Israel.”
SECURITY GUARD: All right, thank you. Let’s keep it going. [inaudible]
REPORTER: What was your name, sir?
LIANO SHARON: Liano Sharon.
AMY GOODMAN: And what happened then?
SECURITY GUARD: Let’s get into the tunnel. You can interview him in the tunnel. OK?
AMY GOODMAN: And what happened next?
SECURITY GUARD: I just don’t want you to break your ankles.
LIANO SHARON: Then the people behind us grabbed a hold of the sign and tried to rip it out of our hands several times. Eventually, they succeeded.
SECURITY GUARD: Interview in the hall, OK? Let’s get him down. All right, thanks for being cooperative, sir.
LIANO SHARON: Yeah, no problem.
SECURITY GUARD: OK. Thank you.
AMY GOODMAN: And why did — and why did you do it?
LIANO SHARON: I did that because we are currently funding a genocide.
BIDEN SUPPORTER 4: Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe! Thank you, Joe!
LIANO SHARON: And we need to — and it needs to stop. And also, I want to — I want to make it clear to the Harris campaign that this is actually in their interest. Netanyahu is trying to instigate a larger war so he can remain in power and avoid going to prison.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re joined now by the three DNC delegates who unfurled the “Stop Arming Israel” banner. They’re all members of Delegates Against Genocide. Nadia Ahmad is a Florida Democratic National Committee delegate and member. Liano Sharon is a longtime Jewish progressive activist, an elected DNC delegate from Michigan. And Esam Boraey is a delegate from Connecticut.
We welcome you all to Democracy Now! here in Chicago. Liano, I want to start with you, because you were the one escorted out by security. If you can explain further why you did what you did? As we heard in that clip as you were talking as you were taken out, you’re a Jewish Michigan delegate, a Democratic National Committee member.
LIANO SHARON: Mm-hmm. Well, I mean, as I said when I was escorted out, you know, I was always raised as a Jew that “never again” means never again for anyone, anywhere, ever, period. And that’s not what we’re doing. We are currently continuing to arm a Zionist regime that is set on genocide and mass murder of children, and we need to stop that. And there isn’t anything else that is as important as that in this moment. So, that’s why I did it.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Esam, I’d like to ask how you managed to organize it. You’re from different states. And the motivation for you to get involved in this kind of protest right on the floor of the convention?
ESAM BORAEY: Well, thanks to Nadia, since we learned that we would be part of the DNC delegation to Chicago, we quickly came together with our history together on organizing and activism in the community since the war on Gaza started, and we decided to do something, and we wanted to make sure that our voices are heard. We tried multiple ways and many ways of doing these things, and that was our last resort last night.
It means a lot because, you know, as an immigrant myself, I was once political activist back in my home country of Egypt, and I was kicked out of the country because I was pushing for justice and equality for everybody. And I believe, and I still do, that within the convention, that will be the best platform that our voices will be heard. And this is why, following Nadia’s lead on that, we decided to do something yesterday.
AMY GOODMAN: So, Nadia, this was your delegation. This was the Florida delegation where you unfurled this banner. It was almost as if they knew. I mean, I was amazed at the alacrity with which, first, they immediately put up these banners that said “We love Joe,” “Thank you, Joe,” but they didn’t have enough to cover the banner, and so someone had a large stash of them, and they were bringing more and more, and they were handing them out so people were holding two and three to cover up this banner. Did other delegates know or in any way support what you did? And talk about your work in Florida. You’re a professor. You’re also getting a Ph.D.
NADIA AHMAD: So, for me, this was really a matter of being able to speak up for the community. And this was a moment where we have a massive audience, and we were there specifically to confront President Joe Biden. We could have confronted at any time at that convention, but we chose specifically during President Joe Biden’s address, because he’s the one who can stop this genocide by picking up the phone and making a phone call, and he has chosen not to do that.
And for the organizing that we have done, it’s really something that has happened on its own, whether you saw with the student encampments that have happened since April, and also with the protests that’s been just endless and ceaseless. And we felt that we could make a change within the party, and that’s why we took the actions that we did. And I specifically decided to do it in Florida, and that was just a strategic location, because we felt that it would be harder for them to take down the banner right away. But I don’t think they knew about it. But what they did — because throughout the time that we were there, they kept giving banners and posters. So, they just started to just give a lot more in that particular area.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And I’m wondering, just tactically, how you managed to get the banner in, because I’m sure that they’re on the lookout for any kind of protest signs that are not part of the official placards that are distributed at the convention.
NADIA AHMAD: So, I was a reporter for six years. I’m an attorney and a law professor. I’ve been to the White House a number of times. I’ve been to DNC events. So I know like the level of security that they will go through. And I also felt that if I didn’t wear anything — like, I wore hijab — I tried to wear something that wouldn’t attract attention, so I wore a large dress to kind of — just wrapped around myself.
AMY GOODMAN: You’re wearing a Yale University T-shirt right now.
NADIA AHMAD: Yeah.
AMY GOODMAN: What’s your connection?
NADIA AHMAD: So, I’m a Ph.D. student there. I was also the first visible Muslim woman, or a hijabi, to be somebody who taught there with the rank of professor.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And I’m wondering, for any of you, the conversations you’ve been having with fellow delegates, what your sense is of the unspoken support that exists for Gaza among the delegates who don’t dare say anything?
LIANO SHARON: There’s a great deal of it. We spoke to a large number of delegates, and the vast majority of the people that we spoke to, certainly the people that I spoke to, were supportive of the idea, but were intimidated by the party. In fact, we know of people who were told explicitly that, “If you participate in this, you will never have a position in the party again.” And that’s the kind of intimidation that we really have to expunge from the Democratic Party, because we have a right to protest and to have our voices heard and to have our opinions known.
AMY GOODMAN: Describe the sash that you’re wearing.
LIANO SHARON: This is a Palestinian symbol, a keffiyeh. This is a — these lines symbolize the Mediterranean Sea, and the dots symbolize the olives, which are, you know, important symbols of Palestine. And it says “Democrats for Palestinian Rights,” which I don’t know why anybody in the Democratic Party could possibly object to Palestinian rights or human rights anywhere.
AMY GOODMAN: Esam, can you describe what happened to you on Sunday around a Palestinian flag?
ESAM BORAEY: Oh, yeah. So, we arrived — I arrived in Chicago on Sunday afternoon. And as part of our efforts to raise the Palestinian issue within the party, we were invited to an event by the American Palestinian Community Association. And there, they shared, gave us flags, Palestinian flags, and pens. So, I didn’t have time to go — after that event, to go back to my hotel room and drop my stuff, so I decided to go, to carry my bag to the reception party. And at the gates, they asked me to open my bag, which I did. And then they started digging into my bag.
And immediately the security guard held my bag from me and said, “You need to wait for a minute,” and then called his supervisor, who came along and looked at the bag and said, “OK, we need to call someone.” So he called the DNC people, who showed up. And I kept begging for any explanation, so the supervisor told me, like, “I’m not going to give you an explanation. The DNC will do. But we’re not going to let you in.” And then the DNC employees showed up, and they asked me to leave or leave the bag behind. I was not allowed to get in with the flag inside. I told them that I’m not planning on anything. I’m just — just a flag in my bag, there is no harm found in that whatsoever. But they forced me to go back and leave my bag outside and come in without the bag, which was very concerning.
JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And I’m wondering, after this convention is over, the debate that will continue among those who believe that the Biden administration, whether it’s President Biden or Kamala Harris, are not really moving in the way they should to end this war, what your sense is of what’s going to happen in the future in terms of the Gaza support movement. And also, I’m getting the feeling that the Biden administration is really trying to rush to announce a ceasefire before this convention is over, as a means of building greater unity within the Democratic Party. Your thoughts on that?
ESAM BORAEY: We’ve seen a lot of change in the rhetoric of the party, which is something we really appreciate and support. But that rhetoric is not going to cause any real change on the ground. So, we are — I believe our efforts to push forward will continue.
However, we have a biggest concern. Like, let’s be honest here for a second. So, we’ve been, for the last — all last night, we’ve been hearing about “We are stopping the fascism from coming to the American politics, and Trump will come back and bring all of the fascism to the American politics again.” And here we are, a hijabi woman, a Jew and an immigrant, who just raised a banner. And the immediate reaction was someone from the Democratic Party who started beating a hijabi woman with a sign on her head, and three others pulled down just the banner, while the staff of the DNC encouraged everybody to raise their signs as high as possible to block just the simple banner. So, if we are fighting fascism, what are we doing in the convention center?
AMY GOODMAN: Nadia, we’re going to give you the last word, and, actually, I’d like to know if any of you want to share, with whether you are going to support Kamala Harris in November, what your thoughts are, what your bar is.
NADIA AHMAD: So, Kamala Harris has to decide if she wants me to support her, because every vote has to be earned. That’s been the position of the Democratic Party. And the Democratic Party has taken the Muslim vote, even the African American vote, for granted for a number of years, because what are we going to support? A Muslim ban?
But we have to decide as a community how we’re going to decide. And so, 80% of the Muslim community, even higher number, depending on which state you live in, are against the Biden administration and are very much against supporting the Democratic Party. And so, if we look at that, I mean, I live in a red state, so it’s hard for my vote to have that much of an impact, but it’s going to really have an impact.
AMY GOODMAN: Liano? We have 10 seconds.
LIANO SHARON: So, I plan to vote for Harris, OK? Because I don’t want Trump. That’s the only reason. I’m not really voting for Harris; I’m voting against Trump.
AMY GOODMAN: And Esam?
ESAM BORAEY: I’m a proud Democratic Party member, but vice president needs to earn my vote.
AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to leave it there. I want to thank you all for being with us, Esam Boraey, a Connecticut delegate; Liano Sharon, a Michigan delegate; and Nadia Ahmad, a Florida delegate. All three, with Delegates Against Genocide, unfurled a banner that read “Stop Arming Israel.”
That does it for our broadcast. It’s now an expanded two-hour broadcast during the DNC. Check it all out at democracynow.org. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González, from CAN TV in Chicago.