A Lobby in Panic: Why America’s Political Ground Is Shifting Beneath Israel’s Defenders
سعيد عريقات
By: Said Arikat
May 18, 2026
News analysis
Washington, D.C- For decades, support for Israel functioned in Washington as a near-sacred article of faith. Democrats and Republicans competed to demonstrate unwavering loyalty to the Israeli state, while lobby organizations such as American Israel Public Affairs Committee operated with extraordinary confidence, shaping congressional discourse through campaign money, donor pressure, and political intimidation.
Today, however, the political atmosphere surrounding Israel is undergoing a historic transformation — and the panic now visible among pro-Israeli lobbyists reveals just how serious that shift has become.
The staggering sums being poured into Kentucky’s Republican primary on Tuesday, May 19, 2026, against Representative Thomas Massie are not merely about one congressional seat. They are a desperate attempt to halt a widening erosion of unquestioned American support for Israel across the political spectrum.
More than $32 million has reportedly been spent in the race, making it the most expensive House primary in American history. Much of that money originates from pro-Israel political organizations and billionaire donors determined to destroy Massie politically because he dared to question Israeli policy, military aid, and the growing influence of the Israel lobby over American foreign policy.
That reality alone tells a larger story: Israel’s defenders no longer feel secure.
For years, organizations aligned with Israel relied on an atmosphere of fear inside Washington. Politicians who criticized Israeli policy risked donor retaliation, media smears, or accusations of antisemitism. The strategy worked remarkably well, especially after the September 11 attacks, when support for Israel became deeply fused with America’s “war on terror” consensus.
But the wars in Gaza — particularly the catastrophic destruction unleashed after October 2023 — changed something fundamental inside the American public consciousness.
Millions of Americans watched entire neighborhoods flattened, hospitals bombed, journalists killed, and starving civilians trapped under siege conditions. Social media shattered the monopoly once held by establishment media narratives. Younger Americans, especially, no longer receive the conflict through the traditional lens of Israeli victimhood alone. They increasingly see Palestinians as human beings living under occupation, blockade, and systematic dispossession.
This generational shift is now visible not only among progressive Democrats, but increasingly among conservatives and libertarians on the American right.
That is why the campaign against Massie matters so profoundly.
Massie is not a left-wing anti-Zionist. He is a libertarian conservative who opposes foreign intervention broadly. He has repeatedly stated that he opposes all foreign aid, not merely aid to Israel. Yet even this limited dissent appears intolerable to pro-Israel organizations.
Why?
Because the danger for the lobby is not Massie himself. The danger is normalization.
If a Republican congressman can openly question military aid to Israel and survive politically, others may follow. If criticizing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu no longer ends political careers, the taboo collapses. Once fear disappears, the lobby’s power weakens dramatically.
The scale of the response against Massie therefore resembles political containment.
Organizations linked to AIPAC, the Republican Jewish Coalition, and major pro-Israel megadonors have flooded Kentucky with advertising portraying Massie as dangerous, disloyal, and outside the Republican mainstream. President Donald Trump himself joined the effort by endorsing Massie’s challenger, demonstrating how closely establishment Republican politics still aligns with pro-Israel interests.
Yet beneath the surface, cracks are spreading.
The most remarkable aspect of this episode is not that Israel’s defenders are spending enormous sums of money. It is that they feel compelled to do so in a deeply conservative district that should once have been politically automatic terrain for them.
Even more revealing is the language now emerging from within the American right itself.
Figures associated with “America First” politics — including commentators such as Tucker Carlson — increasingly frame support for Israel as contradictory to nationalist priorities at home. Many conservative voters now ask why billions of American taxpayer dollars continue flowing abroad while economic insecurity, debt, and social crises deepen domestically.
This does not necessarily reflect hostility toward Jewish Americans. Rather, it reflects growing exhaustion with endless foreign entanglements and a rising belief that Israeli interests have exercised disproportionate influence over American policymaking.
The Israel lobby understands the danger perfectly.
For decades, its greatest strength lay in bipartisanship. Israel was protected simultaneously by liberal interventionists, evangelical conservatives, neoconservatives, and establishment centrists. But now that coalition is fraying from both directions.
Among Democrats, younger voters increasingly view Israel through the framework of settler colonialism, apartheid, and human rights abuses. Polling repeatedly shows collapsing sympathy for Israel among voters under 35. Progressive lawmakers who once feared criticizing Israel now openly accuse it of war crimes.
Meanwhile, on the Republican side, populist conservatives increasingly resent foreign aid packages, military interventions, and what they perceive as ideological policing surrounding Israel.
This dual-front erosion explains the extraordinary aggressiveness now displayed by pro-Israel groups.
The lobby is not operating from confidence. It is operating from anxiety.
The repeated invocation of antisemitism against critics of Israeli policy has also begun losing effectiveness among many Americans. While genuine antisemitism remains a serious and dangerous problem, voters increasingly distinguish between hatred of Jews and criticism of Israeli state actions.
Indeed, the overuse of antisemitism accusations for political purposes may itself be backfiring. Many Americans now perceive such accusations as tools deployed selectively to silence debate rather than defend vulnerable communities.
This does not mean Israel is about to lose American support entirely. Far from it. The institutional architecture backing Israel inside Washington remains enormous: lobbying networks, donor alliances, think tanks, media relationships, evangelical activism, and military partnerships still provide Israel with tremendous influence.
But political hegemony rarely collapses overnight. It erodes gradually — then suddenly.
The Massie race represents one moment in that erosion.
Whether Massie ultimately wins or loses in Tuesday’s May 19 primary may matter less historically than the fact that such a rebellion is now politically conceivable within the Republican Party itself. A decade ago, a Republican openly questioning Israeli policy while surviving nationally would have been almost unimaginable.
Today, it is becoming increasingly normal.
That is precisely why pro-Israeli organizations appear so alarmed.
They understand that American public opinion is changing faster than Washington’s political class. They understand that younger Americans consume information differently, distrust establishment narratives more deeply, and increasingly reject unconditional foreign alliances. And they understand that Israel’s devastating conduct in Gaza has accelerated those trends dramatically.
The enormous money now flooding into American elections on Israel’s behalf may therefore signal not enduring dominance, but mounting insecurity.
Political machines spend most aggressively when they fear losing control.
