WASHINGTON — Pro-Israel lawmakers in Washington, undeterred by the partial shutdown of the United States government, are pursuing their agenda full speed with the introduction of the first piece of legislation before the 116th Senate — a bill that aims to stifle the free-speech rights of American critics of apartheid Israel.
The Republican-controlled Senate’s first bill (S.1) would enact penalties on entities that engage in boycotts of Israel — one of many measures in the United States intended to push back on the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.
BDS seeks to place economic pressure on companies and institutions that support Israeli ones operating in illegally occupied areas in Palestine, in order to pressure the Israeli government into compliance with international law and to cease its practices of apartheid, ethnic cleansing, and the ongoing encroachment of Israeli settlements.
The Senate’s skewed priorities
Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT), pushing back against the timing and symbolic priority being accorded to the bill, said:
It’s absurd that the first bill during the shutdown is legislation which punishes Americans who exercise their constitutional right to engage in political activity. Democrats must block consideration of any bills that don’t reopen the government. Let’s get our priorities right.”
Sanders’ condemnation of the anti-BDS bill should not be taken as signaling support for the movement. Asked about the non-violent movement in an interview with AJ+ in 2016, Sanders said: “I’m not a supporter of [BDS].”
Chip Gibbons — Policy & Legislative Counsel at Defending Rights & Dissent, and an expert on U.S. constitutional law — told MintPress News:
It says quite a bit about the priorities of the new Congress when in the midst of a government shutdown, when federal workers are not receiving their paychecks, the new Congress is more concerned with curtailing the First Amendment rights of the people.”
A battle on both sides of the aisle: Tlaib and Omar step up
The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives’ first bill (H.R.1) tackles corruption, campaign finance and voting rights, underscoring the disparity between the priorities of the bodies. The Senate bill, however, has a number of Democratic backers.
“They forgot what country they represent,” tweeted Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), who joined Rep. llhan Omar (D-MN) as the first Muslim women to be elected to Congress last year. Tlaib added:
This is the U.S., where boycotting is a right & part of our historical fight for freedom & equality. Maybe a refresher on our U.S. Constitution is in order, then get back to opening up our government instead of taking our rights away.”
Omar and Tlaib, both first-term representatives, were the first and second members of Congress to endorse the BDS movement.
Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), a sponsor of S.1 — which, again, seeks to punish American citizens for engaging in First Amendment-protected activity in order to protect the image of a foreign government — fired back at Tlaib, accusing her of anti-Semitism. “This ‘dual loyalty’ canard is a typical anti-Semitic line,” said the senator. Rubio was likely referring to Tlaib’s comment that the bill’s backers “forgot what country they represent.” He went on to mention Israel three times in the tweet, but did not devote any words to his American constituents.
This “dual loyalty” canard is a typical anti-Semitic line#BDS isn’t about freedom & equality, it’s about destroying #Israel
And if boycotting #Israel is constitutionally protected, then boycotting companies that boycott #Israel is also constitutionally protected https://t.co/6yBM0bQB5L
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) January 7, 2019
“BDS isn’t about freedom & equality, it’s about destroying Israel,” Rubio said of the nonviolent economic pressure campaign. “And if boycotting Israel is constitutionally protected, then boycotting companies that boycott Israel is also constitutionally protected.”
Anti-BDS laws violate First Amendment protections
Not so fast, argues Gibbons, who told MintPress:
The Supreme Court has been clear: political boycotts are political speech. Boycotts, divestment, and sanctions aimed at getting Israel to alter its human rights policies towards the Palestinian people are clearly political speech and thus receive the highest protections afforded by the Supreme Court.”
What anti-BDS laws seek to do is punish people for engaging in political speech by denying them a public benefit. The Supreme Court has for decades upheld that a public benefit cannot be denied based on First Amendment-protected speech.”
In other words, it’s not constitutional for a state to “boycott” companies that boycott Israel.
Later, the American Civil Liberties Union tweeted a similar conclusion:
States don’t have the ‘right’ to punish individuals for participating in political boycotts the government doesn’t agree with, which this bill encourages them to do. First Amendment rights belong to the people, Marco Rubio — not the government.”
States don't have the "right" to punish individuals for participating in political boycotts the government doesn't agree with, which this bill encourages them to do.
First Amendment rights belong to the people, @MarcoRubio — not the government. https://t.co/u2dUubnzIS
— ACLU (@ACLU) January 7, 2019
The “preemption” red herring
The S.1 bill is a repeat of one known as S.170, weighed by the last Congress, and would give state and local governments legal authority to engage in such retaliatory boycotts. The aim of S.170 was “to provide for non-preemption of measures by state and local governments to divest from entities that engage in commerce-related or investment- related boycott, divestment, or sanctions activities targeting Israel, and for other purposes.”
In U.S. law, “preemption” means that a higher-ranking body of government — Congress, for example — strips a lower body — a state government, for example — of its regulatory authority. S.170, therefore, shields state-level anti-BDS legislation targeting pro-BDS entities from such potential legal challenges.
Various anti-BDS bills exist in more than half of all U.S. states (26), while an additional 13 states are weighing anti-BDS legislation.
According to Gibbons, however, preemption doctrine was not the principal basis for a successful legal challenge to anti-BDS state laws. “The two federal courts that blocked anti-BDS laws from being enforced did so on First Amendment grounds, not on the grounds that the state’s actions were preempted by Congress,” Gibbons said.
Those legal challenges revolved respectively around the claims of a lawyer for prisoners who worked for the state until his contract was withdrawn over his refusal to sign a pledge not to boycott Israel and a public school curriculum developer and teacher who followed her church’s decision to boycott goods from the illegally occupied West Bank.
So — while S.1 would do nothing to safeguard anti-BDS legislation from legal challenges based on the First Amendment, which have been lodged already — Gibbons said:
This bill will have a chilling effect as it sends a message to states that Congress thinks it is okay to try to suppress a particular social movement. Many states may see this as a green light to engage in such actions. But it doesn’t make state actions suddenly constitutional.”
Legislative and judicial hurdles awaiting
Previous anti-BDS laws were even more harsh, however. One introduced by Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD) last year — which was on track to pass but saw its backers quickly walk away amid massive public outcry — would have criminalized BDS activity.
The Intercept reports that Rubio’s S.1 bill has seven Democratic co-sponsors, enough votes for it to reach the 60-vote threshold to block its opposition from filibustering. It would still need to pass the House of Representatives and be signed by President Trump to become law.
“It’s a bad bill, and it’s title alone, ‘Combating BDS,’ speaks to an impermissible purpose — i.e., combating political speech disfavored by the bill’s sponsor,” Gibbons said.
Top Photo | Protesters demonstrate against a state-sanctioned backlash against the movement for Palestinian human rights. New York City, June 9, 2016. Erik McGregor | Pacific Press | Sipa via AP
Alexander Rubinstein is a staff writer for MintPress News based in Washington, DC. He reports on police, prisons and protests in the United States and the United States’ policing of the world. He previously reported for RT and Sputnik News.
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