by Miri Eden and Eli Leon
U.S.-based NGO Ameinu may be involved in effort to increase turnout among "young secular Israelis, non-wealthy secular Jews and the Arab community," internal memo shows • Ameinu: Efforts aren't aimed at helping any specific party; we parted ways with V15.
An internal Ameinu memo
shows alleged efforts to increase Arab turnout in Israel
|
Photo credit: The Washington Beacon |
A coalition of "progressive" organizations,
bankrolled by U.S. dollars, is actively involved in a get-out-the-vote
effort in Israel, focusing on constituents who are most likely to vote
against Netanyahu, The Washington Free Beacon's Alana Goodman reported
last month.
The U.S.-based media outlet based its report on a confidential strategy memo that it had obtained.
The memo is in the form of a fund-raising
proposal sent to donors on Dec. 17, 2014. "The $3 million initiative is
described in the document as 'a massive, nonpartisan Get Out The Vote
(GOTV) campaign targeting selected demographic and geographic segments
of Israeli society,'" the online newspaper reported.
The memo specifically cites "young secular
Israelis, non-wealthy secular Jews and the Arab community" as the target
audience. Goodman explains that these demographics are more likely to
vote against the incumbent Likud party. According Goodman, the 2015
elections will see an surge in Arab turnout because of the new election
rules that forced the Arab parties to run on a joint ticket. This,
Goodman says, "could make it easier for the left-leaning Labor Party to
form a government."
Goodman was also behind the story scrutinizing
OneVoice, an nongovernmental organization that had received two State
Department grants for ostensibly apolitical activity in Israel despite
its alleged ties to V15, which is actively calling for the ouster of
Netanyahu.
"We've formed a partnership with [V15], but
it's important to know we're absolutely nonpartisan," OneVoice
development and grants officer Christina Taler was quoted in the
Washington Free Beacon. "Our biggest emphasis and focus right now is
just getting people out to vote."
"We are already in touch with a highly
talented combination of knowledgeable Israeli professionals and American
experts with experience in similar recent operations, including the
Obama presidential campaign," says the confidential memo, which cites
Givat Haviva, an educational institution in northern Israel that puts an
emphasis on Arab-Israeli coexistence in its curriculum, as the
organization that would lead the campaign's groundgame in the Arab
community. "Their [Givat Haviva's] Public Engagement programmatic unit
provides a perfect platform to quickly establish the GOTV effort and
their management team is fully committed to the effort, so Givat Haviva
has been chosen to carry out the Arab community GOTV initiative," the
memo states.
Ameinu President Kenneth Bob told Goodman that
the memo was just one of several drafts and denied that his
organization was campaigning for any specific party. He even noted that
the get-out-the-vote efforts was not designed to help any particular
candidate. "I'm sure you know that in the Arab sector, the Likud also
gets votes, they have strong pockets of support," Bob told Goodman. "I'm
very comfortable with this as a nonpartisan effort."
Goodman noted that his voter-turnout efforts
were run independently of V15, although he conceded that the two
organizations did have ties in the past. "Bob initially told the Free
Beacon that the initiative outlined in the memo had no connection to the
V15 campaign or former Obama aide Jeremy Bird," Goodman wrote. "He
later said that V15 and Bird's consulting group 270 Strategies were
involved in the discussions early on, but have since parted ways with
Ameinu."
According to a report on the Channel 1's
nightly news from February 11, 2015, the heads of several Arab
municipalities and other Arab politicos travelled to the United states
where they were provided training aimed at increasing Arab turnout. They
told the Channel 1 crew about the new tools they had received and said
they the workshops provided them more insight. They said the trip was
funded by "various NGOs and organizations," including Ameinu.
Mohammad Darawshe, the co-executive director of the
Givat Haviva Institute, participated in the U.S. visit. Darawshe, a
founder of OneVoice's Israel branch, served as the director of the
Abraham Fund Initiatives. According to Goodman, Darawshe was the "main
organizer" of the visit, and he made sure the other members of the
delegation would get their U.S. visas by means of a fast-track process.
Givat Haviva received State Department funding in 2011, 2012 and 2013,
Goodman reported.
Miri Eden and Eli Leon
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=24107
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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