GOP Senators Call on Blinken to Stop Funding Israeli Group Accused of Influencing Protests Against Judicial Change

GOP Senators Call on Blinken to Stop Funding Israeli Group Accused of Influencing Protests Against Judicial Change
Protesters block a road and hold national flags during a rally against the Israeli government's judicial reform in Tel Aviv, Israel on March 27, 2023. (Ahmad Gharabli/AFP via Getty Images)
Jackson Richman
4/10/2023
Updated:
4/23/2023
0:00
Four Republican senators have called on Secretary of State Antony Blinken to stop U.S. funding for a nongovernmental organization that has been accused of influencing the protests against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s proposed changes to Israel’s judiciary—including its Supreme Court.
The April 4 letter was signed by Sens. Bill Hagerty (R-Tenn.), Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), Ted Cruz (R-Texas), and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.).

“We write to urge the State Department to immediately cease funding the Movement for Quality Government (MQG) and all other partisan organizations in Israel, which undermines one of our strongest allies and interferes in their democracy,” they wrote.

“In spite of longstanding U.S. practice to refrain from funding foreign partisan organizations, the State Department has confirmed that it has sent over $38,000 to MQG, an Israeli nonprofit that has helped to organize—and has participated in—political protests against proposed legislation from Israel’s democratically-elected legislature.”

The State Department has repeatedly denied the allegation that it has funded protests against the proposed changes, which include allowing the government to appoint judges and for the Knesset, Israel’s Parliament, to overturn Supreme Court decisions.

“These accusations are completely and demonstrably false,” the department’s principal deputy press secretary, Vedant Patel, said on March 27.

“The Movement of Quality Government is an NGO, and it received a modest grant from the State Department that was initiated during the previous administration, and the latest disbursal of funds came in September of 2022, prior to the most recent Israeli elections.

“And this grant supported an educational program for Jerusalem schools that supplemented their civic studies curriculum.”

Patel reiterated his statement two days later.

Netanyahu announced a pause on March 27 in the effort to change Israel’s judiciary until the next legislative session, which will be after Passover.

In Israel, Passover started on April 5 and ends on April 12 (April 13 outside of Israel).

In their letter, the senators also decried the State Department for allegedly giving more than $300,000 to Israeli NGO OneVoice in its unsuccessful campaign against Netanyahu’s 2015 election.

“This pattern of the State Department funding partisan organizations in an allied democracy is unacceptable,” they wrote. “It makes no difference which side of the political divide a given organization is aligned with.

“If the government of a U.S. partner or ally was funding partisan organizations in the United States, we would rightly find such foreign interference in our democracy unacceptable.

“The United States must stand with our allies and partners around the world—not undermine them.”

The senators asked Blinken to respond by April 18 “with a promise that the department will cease such funding and will never fund another partisan organization in Israel again.”

A State Department spokesperson told The Epoch Times on April 11, “As a general matter, we don’t comment on congressional correspondence.”

Jackson Richman is a Washington correspondent for The Epoch Times. In addition to Washington politics, he covers the intersection of politics and sports/sports and culture. He previously was a writer at Mediaite and Washington correspondent at Jewish News Syndicate. His writing has also appeared in The Washington Examiner. He is an alum of George Washington University.
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