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Wednesday, June 03, 2026

America Broke Something When It Gave Trump a Second Chance

 

America Broke Something When It Gave Trump a Second Chance

A tower of egg shells emerging from a palette of eggs.
Meghan Marin/Connected Archives

The Heritage Foundation’s “Mandate for Leadership: The Conservative Promise” — popularly known as Project 2025 — was much more than a wish list of conservative policy preferences. It was much more, even, than a blueprint for a second Trump administration.

Project 2025 was, above all, a statement of values and a theory of governance. Its authors did not simply want to move national policymaking to the right. They wanted to use the authority of the executive branch to impose a new regime on the United States.

“We are in the process of the second American Revolution,” declared Kevin Roberts, president of the Heritage Foundation, in the summer of 2024. This revolution, he added, “will remain bloodless if the left allows it.” Russell Vought, who leads the Office of Management and Budget and was, like Roberts, a key architect of Project 2025, also spoke publicly about the need for a “radical constitutionalism” and a tribune-like president who would dismantle the New Deal state, sell the scrap and return the nation to the status quo ante of the 19th century.

Much of the disruption and destruction of the past year and change is downstream of the revolutionary orientation of Roberts, Vought and the other alumni of Project 2025 who have taken up places in and around the Trump administration. To observe the aggrandizement of power in the executive, the decimation of the federal bureaucracy, the destruction of much of the nation’s medical, scientific and public health infrastructure and the broad attack on racial and gender equality is to see the many faces of a furious effort to restructure the existing nation to match the one envisioned by these far-right ideologues.

If this is all true, and it is, then any plausible response to Project 2025 must include a larger vision for the future of the American Republic. A Project 2029 cannot be a collection of Democratic Party agenda items. It must articulate a broad new conception of the nation’s political order — one that will guide the way a future Democratic-led government might wield power. Above all, Democrats must have a plan for reconstruction — for building something new on the wreckage of what President Trump, MAGA and the Republican Party have wrought — not for restoration of what was.

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As it happens, several Democratic groups are drafting the equivalent of a Project 2029. And so far, unfortunately, it is not the reconstruction agenda the country needs. It is, instead, just another Democratic Party policy document: a grab bag of ideas stitched together with the usual slogans and gestures toward economic populism.

It is not that these policies are bad. Most of them, from what has been revealed, are good: worthwhile plans to break up utility monopolies, support child-rearing, regulate social media and artificial intelligence, and curtail corporate abuse.

But none of this reflects or represents a far-reaching or comprehensive idea of what the nation might be. There is no coherent worldview at work, nor does there seem to be any inkling or awareness of the obstacles — structural, political and institutional — that will confront, and likely stymie, all but the most threadbare and ineffectual Democratic agendas for governing.

What difference will specific policy items make if there are profound obstacles to simply governing at all? A Project 2029 that has nothing to say about either the Senate filibuster, or an ideologically captured Supreme Court, or extreme partisan gerrymandering — among other concerns — is not a Project 2029 worth the time or effort.

The same is true for a Project 2029 that fails to speak to questions of constitutional authority. Democrats need a theory of constitutional power: a sense of what the Constitution is and how it both authorizes and legitimizes the kind of government they hope to build. For Trump-aligned conservatives, the Constitution is an unlimited grant of executive authority, where sovereignty lies with a president who is more Bonapartist tribune than Madisonian chief magistrate. Their American Republic is not one led by and for self-governing individuals but one directed from above by an executive who claims to stand as the living embodiment of the national spirit. The entire country, in the words of the White House, must meet “the president’s priorities.”

By contrast, it is not clear that Democrats have any sense of what they want the American Republic to be, versus a sense of the kinds of policies they hope to institute. This is important because their constitutional vision, or lack thereof, will shape how they attempt to rebuild American democracy.

During Reconstruction, after the Civil War, Republicans worked to refound the nation as a democratic and egalitarian republic that embodied the values of the Declaration of Independence. “By the Constitution it is stipulated that ‘the United States shall guaranty to every state a republican form of government,’” said Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts in his eulogy for Abraham Lincoln, “but the meaning of this guaranty must be found in the birthday Declaration of the Republic, which is the controlling preamble of the Constitution. Beyond all question, the United States, when called to enforce the guaranty, must insist on the equality of all before the law, and the consent of the governed.” Such, he continued, “is the true idea of republican government according to American institutions.”

It was this view that led Republicans, radical and otherwise, to write their aspirations toward freedom and political equality into the Constitution through the 14th and 15th Amendments. It also shaped how they responded to President Andrew Johnson and hostile Supreme Court justices, who tried to trim and curtail their vision. They did not just override Johnson’s vetoes; they also impeached him. And they did not just criticize the court; they took steps to tie its hands, limit its power and strip its jurisdiction. The extent to which Republicans in this era operated as an imperial Congress was the closest this country has ever come to congressional supremacy, the result of their expansive conception of American democracy.

As they look ahead to 2029 and beyond, Democrats need that kind of vision. They need, in particular, a commitment to a constitutional order centered on the power and prerogatives of Congress. And they need to begin to work through the details of what this will mean in policy and in law. It is this work that will shape how Democrats approach the major concerns of the post-Trump moment: the state of the federal bureaucracy, the scope of executive power and the problem of judicial supremacy over the political system. It is ambitious, yes. But so was Project 2025.

“Broken eggs cannot be mended,” Lincoln observed in a reply to August Belmont, a leading Democratic Party organizer and financier in New York, who had forwarded to the president the comments of an angry Louisiana slaveholder who wanted restoration of the Union “as it was.” Not much later, Lincoln repurposed the quip in different form. “Broken eggs can never be mended,” he wrote in reference to the fate of slavery as the war carried on, “and the longer the breaking proceeds the more will be broken.”

Fort Sumter broke the Union and with it, slavery. Whatever the nation was or would be in the aftermath of the war, neither the nation nor its Constitution would protect, support or sanction human bondage.

You can think of this Trump administration as a similar state of affairs. The American people broke something when they gave Trump a second chance in office. And there is no going back to the Union as it was. If Democrats hope to lead the nation to any kind of recovery, much less renewal, they must understand and internalize this fact of the matter.

Broken eggs cannot be mended. To try to do so, to try to return to some notion of normality, is to court failure. Worse, it is to play a repeat of the last Democratic administration when, in pursuit of the familiar, the Democratic Party all but passed the baton back to reactionaries working toward something revolutionary.

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Jamelle Bouie became a New York Times Opinion columnist in 2019. Before that he was the chief political correspondent for Slate magazine. He is based in Charlottesville, Va."

A Trump Endorsement Falls Flat: 4 Election Takeaways From Iowa and Beyond

 

A Trump Endorsement Falls Flat: 4 Election Takeaways From Iowa and Beyond

"The president’s pick for governor of Iowa lost his primary, while Democrats in the state chose their nominee in what they hope will be a competitive Senate race.

Representative Randy Feenstra speaking onstage at a campaign event.
Representative Randy Feenstra, a Republican, lost his primary bid for governor of Iowa despite a late endorsement from President Trump.Scott Olson/Getty Images

Republican voters in Iowa dealt a shock defeat to President Trump on Tuesday, narrowly rejecting his chosen candidate for governor in favor of another conservative contender who ran as a political outsider.

The primary loss for Representative Randy Feenstra, whom the president endorsed on Friday afternoon, came at a time of mixed signals of Mr. Trump’s power over the Republican Party. He has won a series of dominant primary victories over Republican opponents, but has faced rising pushback from his party in Congress.

Here are four takeaways from a busy primary night in Iowa and several other states. (You can follow California’s high-stakes primaries here.)

Trump had a rare high-profile primary loss.

In modern Republican primary politics, Mr. Trump’s endorsement is the gold standard. In the last month, it has ousted sitting senators, a congressman and state legislators whom the president deemed insufficiently loyal.

So when Mr. Feenstra won Mr. Trump’s endorsement for governor last week, it felt like the push he needed to get past four candidates in the primary.

Yet Mr. Feenstra was toppled on Tuesday by Zach Lahn, a conservative political operative and farmer who ran an insurgent campaign. Mr. Feenstra was seen as having run a lackluster campaign, and also faced the wrath of former Representative Steve King, who lost to Mr. Feenstra in a 2020 primary and backed Mr. Lahn.

Mr. Feenstra’s defeat makes him the highest-profile candidate endorsed by Mr. Trump to lose a Republican primary race in years — perhaps since Luther Strange, an appointed senator in Alabama, fell to Roy Moore in a 2017 special election primary. Mr. Moore went on to lose the general election to Doug Jones, a Democrat.

Mr. Feenstra was widely seen as having run a lackluster campaign that failed to win over the state’s conservative base. Mr. Trump’s endorsement was most likely just too late — there was no time to produce television ads highlighting it in the final days before the primary.

The result sets up a general election that Democrats believe is their best chance to flip a governorship. The Democrat in the race is Rob Sand, the state auditor, who is mounting a well-funded campaign to succeed Gov. Kim Reynolds, who did not seek re-election. No Democrat has won election as Iowa governor since 2006.

A Democrat seen as Schumer’s pick won in Iowa.

Josh Turek, a Paralympic gold medalist who was backed by $10 million from a group allied with Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the minority leader, coasted to victoryin Iowa’s Democratic primary for Senate. He defeated Zach Wahls, a progressive state senator who ran a campaign aimed at upending the party establishment.

Mr. Turek gives Democrats a Senate nominee with experience winning state legislative races on Republican turf. He will face Representative Ashley Hinson, a Republican, in the general election to succeed Senator Joni Ernst, a retiring two-term Republican.

Democrats need to hold their own Senate seats and flip at least four G.O.P.-held seats to take a majority in the chamber.

Mr. Turek’s primary triumph demonstrated that despite Democratic voters’ anger toward their leaders in Washington, it remains difficult for an insurgent candidate to overcome a big financial disadvantage.

Mr. Wahls, a former State Senate minority leader, ran as a political outsider who aimed to upend the Washington establishment, pledging to vote against Mr. Schumer as Senate Democratic leader.

In the end, the $10 million from VoteVets, a Schumer-aligned Democratic veterans organization, was too much for Mr. Wahls to overcome.

A progressive prevailed in a crowded New Jersey primary.

Dr. Adam Hamawy, who was endorsed by Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, won a crowded Democratic primary for a deep-blue House district in central New Jersey.

A retired Army surgeon, Dr. Hamawy is best known for helping to save the life of Tammy Duckworth, now a senator from Illinois. He is running to succeed Representative Bonnie Watson Coleman, who did not seek re-election.

Dr. Hamawy is the second progressive to win a contested New Jersey primary this year. In a February primary, Analilia Mejia, a political organizer who was also endorsed by Mr. Sanders and Ms. Ocasio-Cortez, surprised political observers in the state by winning a special-election primary. Ms. Mejia coasted to a primary victory on Tuesday.

A Biden alumna cruised in New Mexico.

Deb Haaland, who served as interior secretary during the Biden administration, won an easy victory in the Democratic primary for governor of New Mexico without an endorsement from the former president.

Ms. Haaland dispatched Sam Bregman, a local prosecutor who tried to run an anti-establishment campaign. Mr. Bregman is the father of the Chicago Cubs third baseman Alex Bregman. 

Reid J. Epstein is a Times reporter covering campaigns and elections from Washington."

Scott Pelley Accuses CBS News Boss of ‘Murdering’ ‘60 Minutes’

 

Scott Pelley Accuses CBS News Boss of ‘Murdering’ ‘60 Minutes’

“During a staff meeting, Scott Pelley, a longtime “60 Minutes” correspondent, accused CBS News editor-in-chief Bari Weiss of “murdering” the program. Pelley criticized the appointment of Nick Bilton, a tech journalist with limited broadcast news experience, as executive producer, questioning his qualifications and the network’s commitment to the show’s future. The meeting, intended to introduce Bilton, became tense as Pelley expressed concerns about recent staff firings and the direction of the program.

In an explosive staff meeting, Mr. Pelley, a correspondent for the long-running Sunday news show, blasted Bari Weiss, the CBS editor in chief, and Nick Bilton, the show’s new executive producer.

Bari Weiss, the editor in chief of CBS News, and the show’s longtime correspondent Scott Pelley.
Leigh Vogel/Getty Images for Uber, X and The Free Press; Charles Sykes/Invision, via Associated Press

CBS News faced a fresh wave of turmoil on Monday after Scott Pelley, the “60 Minutes” correspondent, laced into the show’s newly hired executive producer during a staff meeting and accused Bari Weiss, the network’s editor in chief, of “murdering” the longstanding Sunday news program.

In an extraordinary exchange, Mr. Pelley, his newscaster’s baritone sometimes shaking in anger, told Nick Bilton, the new executive producer, that he had “slender” qualifications for his new job and questioned the network’s commitment to the future of the program, according to a recording of the meeting obtained by The New York Times.

The 10 a.m. gathering, held at the program’s Midtown Manhattan headquarters, was intended as a formal introduction to Mr. Bilton, a tech journalist and filmmaker who was appointed last week as part of a major shake-up at “60 Minutes.” CBS fired Tanya Simon, the previous executive producer, and her deputy, along with Sharyn Alfonsi and Cecilia Vega, two of the show’s correspondents — an event that Mr. Pelley referred to as “Black Thursday.”

The meeting quickly turned tense — not a surprise after months of strain between veteran journalists at “60 Minutes” and Ms. Weiss, an opinion journalist who was a longtime critic of legacy media institutions before she became the head of one last year. She was appointed by David Ellison, a tech scion who took control of CBS’s parent company, Paramount, in a multibillion-dollar merger.

Mr. Bilton, who had never worked in traditional broadcast news, opened Monday’s meeting by trying to assuage the anxieties of staff members who believed he might fundamentally change the decades-old DNA of the country’s top-rated news program.

“For me, the journalism is the journalism,” Mr. Bilton said, according to the recording. “That is why I am here. That is why we are all here.” He added: “The rumors people are spreading, that I’m going to turn the show into 60 one-minute episodes, that it’s going to be like TikTok, that is not changing. The show is going to stay exactly like it is for now.”

Nick Bilton, a tech journalist and filmmaker, was appointed executive producer of “60 Minutes” last week.Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images

He also warned that the broadcast television industry that incubated “60 Minutes” would soon be obsolete. “Broadcast is an ice cube that is melting, OK?” Mr. Bilton said, saying the show had to adapt. “Bari loves this institution,” he added. “She loves ’60 Minutes.’”

At that, Mr. Pelley interrupted.

“She is murdering ‘60 Minutes,’” the correspondent said. “She does not love this place. She was brought in to kill it, and she’s been doing exactly that.”

Mr. Pelley added: “She has no qualifications for her job; you have slender qualifications for this job. The changes that she’s made at the ‘Evening News’ have been catastrophic, so why should we expect that any of this is going to be any better?”

Mr. Bilton responded: “Well, I will show you. That’s what I have to say. That is my plan over the next two weeks. I’ll be meeting with everyone. I’m very excited to meet with everyone, yourself included.”

CBS News did not respond to a request for comment.

Ms. Weiss did not attend the gathering. A CBS executive at the meeting said that Ms. Weiss had been “prepared to come, and we asked her not to,” citing the staff’s ill feelings surrounding the firings.

Ms. Weiss and Mr. Bilton had reached out to Mr. Pelley several times in recent days for a private discussion, but Mr. Pelley did not respond, according to two people familiar with their exchanges. 

In the meeting on Monday, Mr. Pelley pressed Mr. Bilton repeatedly on why CBS had fired Ms. Alfonsi and Ms. Vega. Mr. Bilton said those decisions predated his hiring. Mr. Pelley asked Mr. Bilton why he had accepted a position at a program “knowing that you will never be welcome here.”

“I have no problem taking a job in a place that I am not welcome in,” Mr. Bilton said. “I don’t think that will be the case.” He added: “I have been a journalist for 25 years, Scott. I’ve sat across from incredibly powerful people like you have, and none of it intimidates me. OK? So you are not going to intimidate me in front of this group of people. I want that to be clear.”

Mr. Bilton said that he wanted to help “60 Minutes” avoid the fate of old-media stalwarts that had failed to adapt, citing Time magazine.

“I care so deeply about this institution,” Mr. Bilton said, to which Mr. Pelley interrupted: “Oh, please.”

At one point, Charles Forelle, a top deputy to Ms. Weiss, urged Mr. Pelley not to act “rude” toward Mr. Bilton.

“I’m not being rude,” Mr. Pelley responded. “You know what was rude? Black Thursday was rude.”

Ms. Weiss’s handling of “60 Minutes” has generated internal turmoil for months.

In December, she pulled a segment reported by Ms. Alfonsi, about the brutal treatment of migrants in a Salvadoran prison, saying that it needed more reporting. The segment was critical of the Trump administration, and Ms. Alfonsi said the decision was “political.” The piece ultimately aired with some additional comments from the Trump administration.

On Monday, Mr. Bilton moved to conclude the meeting after roughly 15 minutes. He encouraged the assembled staff members to partake in the food that had been laid out.

“I just want to thank everyone for graciously being so welcoming,” Mr. Bilton said. “I look forward to talking to you in a one-on-one setting as these meetings are scheduled. And enjoy the bagels.”

The “60 Minutes” staff applauded Mr. Pelley after Mr. Bilton departed.

Michael M. Grynbaum writes about the intersection of media, politics and culture. He has been a media correspondent at The Times since 2016.“

Tuesday, June 02, 2026

Trump Administration Live Updates: President Names Bill Pulte as Acting Director of National Intelligence

 

Trump Administration Live Updates: President Names Bill Pulte as Acting Director of National Intelligence

“President Trump named Bill Pulte, a home-building heir, as acting director of national intelligence, replacing Tulsi Gabbard. This appointment is expected to face criticism due to Pulte’s lack of national security experience.

Pulte in a blue suit and blue and red tie.
Bill Pulte, the director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency, at a hearing in Washington last year.Eric Lee/The New York Times

What We’re Covering Today

  • National Intelligence: President Trump announced on Tuesday that he was naming Bill Pulte, a home-building heir who runs the Federal Housing Finance Agency, to be the acting director of national intelligence, replacing Tulsi Gabbard. The move is almost certain to draw criticism as Mr. Pulte has no known experience for a national security role. Read more ›

  • State Department: Secretary of State Marco Rubio will testify before the U.S. Senate on Tuesday morning in a budget session that is also sure to cover pressing national security issues, such as President Trump’s negotiations to end the war with Iran and an intensifying U.S. pressure campaign against Cuba’s government.”

Aipac affiliate has funded lavish trips to Israel for dozens of Congress members since 7 October, filings reveal

 

Aipac affiliate has funded lavish trips to Israel for dozens of Congress members since 7 October, filings reveal

“The American Israel Education Foundation (AIEF), a charitable affiliate of the pro-Israel lobby Aipac, has funded lavish trips to Israel for dozens of Congress members and their staff since October 7, 2023. Despite declining support for Israel among American voters, these trips, which include briefings from Israeli officials and visits to settlements, continue to be a fixture of foreign policy education for lawmakers. The Guardian’s analysis reveals that AIEF spent over $4.2 million on these trips, with some members, like Steny Hoyer and Brad Schneider, attending multiple times.

Revealed: AIEF, a charitable affiliate of pro-Israel lobby Aipac, has spent millions on travel for lawmakers from both parties, even as voters’ support for Israel plummets

gray and red collage of politicians, maps and the Aipac logo
Since 7 October 2023, at least 26 Democratic and 52 Republican representatives have attended AIEF trips in at least 15 delegations for members of Congress and their staff. Composite: Rita Liu/The Guardian/Getty Images

Dozens of members of Congress and Capitol Hill staffers have enjoyed lavish gifted travel to Israel funded by an Aipac affiliate since 7 October 2023, amid Israel’s expanding wars on its neighbors and despite plummeting levels of support among Americans for the country’s policies, a Guardian analysis has found.

Congressional ethics filings and other public records show the trips, led by the American Israel Education Foundation (AIEF), revolved around one-sided briefings on Middle East politics and Israeli domestic and foreign policy. Lawmakers and their staffers from both parties met Israeli officials, military contractors and civil society figures, including Benjamin Netanyahu and advocates for the annexation of the West Bank and the displacement of Palestinians from Jerusalem.

The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac) and other pro-Israel groups have sponsored such trips for years, and both Democratic and Republican lawmakers have joined. But the continued participation of Democratic lawmakers and their staff on recent trips is particularly noteworthy given how much sympathy for Israel has ebbed among Democratic voters, and the pains that some Democratic politicians have recently taken to distance themselves from the lobby group.

A recent poll found that eight in 10 Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents have an unfavorable view of Israel, along with six in 10 Americans broadly.

The congressional ethics filings show that members of Congress and their staffers were hosted at luxurious hotels, dined at top-tier restaurants and received briefings in at least one West Bank settlement. While one of the trips referenced in this story has previously been reported in broad terms, the Guardian is revealing details relating to itineraries, costs and other trips for the first time.

Since 7 October 2023, at least 26 Democratic and 52 Republican representatives have attended AIEF trips in at least 15 delegations for members of Congress and their staff. The Guardian analysis found that the group paid more than $4.2m for those delegations – an average of over $26,600 per member. A few members – including Democrats Steny Hoyer, Greg Landsman and Brad Schneider – took multiple AIEF-funded trips during this period.

“These trips have been a standard tool for building support for Israel on Capitol Hill,” said Stephen Walt, a professor of international relations at Harvard’s Kennedy School who has written widely about the pro-Israel lobby. “Agreeing to go on one of these trips is also a litmus test for politicians who want to signal a pro-Israel position to Aipac and to important donors.”

a man in suit speaks on stage into microphone
US representative Steny Hoyer speaks during the Aipac policy conference in Washington DC in 2019.Photograph: SOPA Images/LightRocket/Getty Images

AIEF is a charitable affiliate of Aipac, and enjoys non-profit status that allows Aipac to skirt federal prohibitions on lobbying organizations funding overseas travel for US officials. AIEF, incorporated in 1988, is the vehicle through which Aipac funds the week-long Israel trips that have become a fixture of foreign policy education for new members of Congress and their senior aides.

Though legally distinct, AIEF relies on Aipac infrastructure, including office space. In 2019 alone, the Intercept reported, the foundation sponsored 129 trips totalling $2.32m, bankrolled by a small number of Jewish philanthropic foundations including those of Paul Singer, a Republican mega-donor.

No members of Congress or their staffers responded to requests for comment on this reporting.

The AIEF, however, via spokesperson Deryn Sousa, replied in an email: “AIEF missions are designed to educate participants about the US-Israel relationship, the security concerns confronting our closest ally in the Middle East, and the geo-strategic challenges and opportunities in the region.”

Sousa added: “Participants visit historical and religious sites throughout the country and meet with Israeli officials and civilians from across the political spectrum who offer a diverse range of perspectives and opinions, offering well-rounded insights and full transparency into the complex culture, geography, politics and prospects for peace.”

Continuity more than change’

AIEF-funded congressional travel to Israel paused for several months following the 7 October attacks and the ensuing war in Gaza, before resuming again in March 2024 when eight Democratic members and one staff member traveled on an itinerary that included a visit to military installations on the Lebanese border and an Israeli military cemetery.

Travel costs for members varied: as in other delegations, members were able to bring family members, and the attendance of Schneider’s wife meant that his travel costs came to over $44,200, according to the filings.

AIEF is not the only group sponsoring lawmakers’ travel to Israel, with liberal Zionist organization J Street funding trips mostly for Democrats, and other groups – such as the Jewish Institute for National Security of America and the Atlantic Council national security thinktank – funding trips for members of both parties. But AIEF stands out for its generosity in funding Israel travel. The pace of trips since 2024 has largely held steady, even amid a broadening consensus among human rights workersinternational organizations and scholars that Israel’s conduct in Gaza constitutes genocide.

The documents show that an AIEF trip from 6-14 August 2025 brought at least 15 Democrats to Israel, including Wesley Bell (Missouri), George Latimer (New York), Eugene Vindman (Virginia) and Gil Cisneros (California). Earlier the same month, 20 GOP House members, including Randy Fine, the vociferous pro-Israel representative from Florida, enjoyed an AIEF-sponsored trip with a similar itinerary.

Bell and Latimer were both elected with the help of millions of dollars from Aipac’s Super Pac, deployed to defeat incumbents Cori Bush and Jamaal Bowman.

Bell has defended Aipac’s role in US politics, including at a St Louis town hall in December, where he faced down protesters who demanded that Missouri politicians stop taking contributions from the organization. Latimer, meanwhile, has faced criticism from progressive groups and his former primary opponent Bowman in recent weeks over chummy public appearanceswith Mike Lawler, the pro-Israel New York Republican whose seat is in Democrats’ firing line in November.

three men in suits and a woman in a dress stand together smiling in front of american and israeli flags
Benjamin Netanyahu meets with Mike Lawler, Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick and Michael McCaul on 26 May 2025. Photograph: Michael McCaul’s 0ffice

The August 2025 trip’s opening keynote, titled Overcoming Obstacles to Peace, was scheduled to be delivered by Tal Becker, a former senior legal adviser to Israel’s ministry of foreign affairs. Becker is the lead legal counselrepresenting Israel at the international court of justice in the genocide casebrought by South Africa.

Members were also scheduled for a late-night visit to the City of Davidarcheological site in occupied East Jerusalem, which is operated by the Elad Foundation, a settler organization that has acquired Palestinian properties in the adjacent neighbourhood of Silwan and uses biblical-period archaeology as a vehicle for Jewish settlement expansion in East Jerusalem.

They also visited a Rafael Advanced Defense Systems facility in Haifa for a session billed as “US-Israel Defense Cooperation” and had meetings with Netanyahu, Yair Lapid and US ambassador Mike Huckabee. They stayed at the luxurious King David hotel in Jerusalem and the upscale Magdala hotel in Galilee.

On the delegation’s third day in Israel, the country’s security cabinet approveda full military reoccupation of Gaza City. The trip ended eight days before the UN-backed Integrated Food Security Phase Classification system confirmedfamine in Gaza for the first time.

AIEF declared per-traveller costs ranging from roughly $16,000 for single members to more than $37,000 for those travelling with a sponsored family member. The total declared value of the trip’s gifted travel to Democratic members alone reached about $400,000.

An earlier AIEF “senior congressional staff” trip, in February 2025, was slated to bring 13 senior House aides to Israel – five Democratic staffers and eight Republicans.

On that trip, the delegation met at the Knesset with Simcha Rothman of the Religious Zionism party. Rothman is the legislative architect of Netanyahu’s 2023 judicial overhaul, the constitutional crisis sparking the nationwide protests that paralysed Israel in the months before 7 October.

On the trip’s final full day, the delegation received a briefing at Alfei Menashe in the occupied West Bank. Alfei Menashe is an illegal Israeli settlement east of the green line, around which Israel’s separation barrier was diverted to enclose the settlement and a number of Palestinian villages on the Israeli side.

AIEF hospitality continued into 2026, up to the eve of Israel and the US’s war on Iran.

An AIEF trip scheduled for February this year – which concluded less than a week before the initial attacks – included five Democratic staffers and seven Republicans.

On that trip, travelers heard from Ohad Tal, an MK with the Religious Zionist party, which is chaired by Bezalel Smotrich, Israel’s finance minister. Tal has publicly argued for the full annexation of the occupied territories, in alignment with Smotrich’s settlement-expansion and Palestinian-displacement programme.

AIEF paid just under $17,000 for each staffer, according to the filings; they stayed at four-and-a-half-star hotels in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv and Tiberias.

a group of people in formal wear sit and stand together
Isaac Herzog, the Israeli president, met with delegations from Republicans and Democrats from US Congress who came to Israel with Aipac on 11 August 2025. Photograph: President of Israel Office

An AIEF trip from 16-24 August 2025 brought staffers for House Democrats to Israel as Israeli forces were carrying out ground operations in Gaza City. The offices represented were those of John Larson (Connecticut), Kathy Castor (Florida), Luz Rivas (California), Cleo Fields (Louisiana), Yassamin Ansari (Arizona), former member Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick (Florida) and the late David Scott (Georgia).

While Aipac and its big-spending allies were credited this month with tipping the balance against Republican Thomas Massie in Kentucky, recent Democratic primary results suggest that its influence is diminishing in the party, with many Democrats now seeking to distance themselves as the standing of Israel and its US advocates continues to erode.

“I think these recent trips represent continuity more than change,” said Walt, the international relations professor, in an email. However, he added: “Winning people over is getting harder to do given the situation in Gaza and the West Bank and the rightward shift within Israeli politics itself.”