GBH0%
Vote to cut Israel aid too little, too late, say Dem. challengers for Mass. House seats 72%
By Adam Reilly0%
7/17/2026, 5:47:41 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 25 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Representativeness Heuristic, and Hasty Generalization, with Confirmation Bias as the most egregious example at 18.8% saturation with 144 hits. Analysis detected 1,338 faulty-reasoning hits from 768 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 64.9% and a BS Rank of 72% (4,992 of 17,437 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 71.40% of the article peer group.
The entire Massachusetts House delegation joined the more than half of the Democrats in the U.S.
House who backed an amendment to cut $3.3 billion in aid for Israel Wednesday.
The even includes traditionally staunch Israel supporters like House Whip Katherine Clark, the second-highest-ranking Democrat in the House, and Rep.
Jake Auchincloss.
Asked to explain his vote, Auchincloss noted the cut would not apply to Israel’s defensive weapons systems.
However, he said that both President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu need to be held accountable for “their disastrous war against Iran, their empowerment of settler violence in the West Bank, and their strategic incoherence against Islamic terrorism.”
Clark said she had concerns about the amendment’s other provisions, including no humanitarian funding for Palestinian refugees and civilians.
But she voted in favor regardless because “the status quo is not tenable.”
“We should not provide a blank check for military aid to any country that does not comply with U.S. law, interests, and values,” she said.
”The Netanyahu government has failed to meet that standard.”
For Auchincloss, Clark, and other members of the delegation, however, there may have been an additional consideration behind their vote — namely, primary challenges.
Here in Massachusetts, many Democratic challengers have been critical of what they see as excessively strong support by incumbents for Israel’s policies and actions.
And while Wednesday’s votes is being interpreted in many quarters as a sign of fractured backing for Israel among America’s political establishment, some of those same challengers say incumbents didn’t go far enough.
That includes Tarik Samman, a researcher and union organizer and one of two Democrats challenging Clark this fall.
“I’m happy that they are starting to wake up, but at the same time, I’m very skeptical,” Samman said.
“Until they renounce the AIPAC money they take, until they talk about the detention of Ro Khanna in Israel and denounce what happened to him there, and until they denounce the murder [by] the Israeli and American military — until they do all of this, what they do right now will be questionable.
“Blocking $3.3 billion when they know the vote’s not going to pass in the House — there’s a lot of question marks,” Samman added.
“One symbolic vote doesn’t undo years of enabling a genocide and war crimes from the Israeli government,” Paz said.
“We need someone who’s willing to lead before it’s politically convenient.
Like, we need leaders who lead, not leaders who follow the polls.”
Like Samman, Paz also noted that the votes for the amendment in question, which was introduced by Republican Thomas Massie, were purely symbolic given monolithic opposition from the GOP.
“If Katherine Clark is serious about changing course, don’t stop at a symbolic amendment, right?”
he said.
“You can cosponsor the Block the Bombs Act to stop offensive weapons transfers.
You can stop taking money from AIPAC.
If there’s a real change of course here, the money would follow and the legislation would follow.”
Clark did not immediately respond to a request for comment from GBH News.
Jason Poulos, who works in AI and is challenging Auchincloss this fall, called the congressman’s vote “a promising development.”
“But I think we have to remember that Representative Auchincloss has taken over a million dollars from AIPAC and pro-Israel subsidiary groups since 2020,” he said, citing a review of public campaign-finance data.
“And he’s voted for every supplemental defense bill towards Israel — so, $23 billion in military funding for Israel in the last two and a half years.
“My take is that we really need a congressperson to represent this district,” Poulos added.
“The money should be going to our communities for healthcare, education, housing.”
Auchincloss also did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Perhaps the most upbeat assessment of the incumbents’ votes on the amendment came from Patrick Roath, an attorney and former Common Cause Massachusetts board chair who’s seeking to unseat Rep.
Stephen Lynch.
“I would have voted ‘Yes’ on that amendment,” Roath said.
“What you see is consensus, right?
Consensus in the Massachusetts delegation, consensus across the Democratic Party reflecting, I think, a view that the Netanyahu government has not been using weapons in a way that most voters are comfortable with.
”And ... the actions in Gaza, the actions in Lebanon [are] not something that we can stand behind,“ Roath added.
”And it is really appropriate to change the status quo, the relationship between our country and the Israeli government when it comes to military funding.”
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