Congresswoman Summer Lee spoke at length Thursday evening about recent anti-Muslim attacks that have been launched by Republicans as well as the corporate media against two progressive political leaders—reserving much of her condemnation for Democratic lawmakers who have remained silent as Rep. Rashida Tlaib and US House candidate Adam Hamawy have been both directly and indirectly accused of “terrorism” in recent days.

“Democrats, we are way too quiet right now,” said Lee (D-Pa.) in a three-minute video she posted on her official social media accounts. “This is a moral rot that we are dealing with, and I hope that we will not stand by and let this particular hatred grow and grow until it’s out of our control.”

Lee spoke up a day after Rep. Max Miller (R-Ohio) openly accused Tlaib, the only Palestinian-American member of Congress, of advocating “for terrorists on a daily basis” during a debate on a proposal she introduced to block US forces from taking part in Israel’s invasion of Lebanon—a war powers resolution that ultimately failed to pass Thursday after House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and more than 100 other Democrats joined the GOP in opposing it.

More than 3,500 Lebanese people have been killed and 1.2 million have been forcibly displaced since Israel began attacking Lebanon in March, in what it says is an effort to defeat Hezbollah. Israeli officials have said they are using the Israel Defense Forces’ (IDF) decimation of Gaza as a “model” in Lebanon.

While Tlaib advocated on the House floor for Lebanese civilians, Miller characterized Hezbollah as “butchers that you like to hang out with to a certain extent,” addressing the progressive congresswoman—prompting her to demand that Miller’s comments be stricken from the record and accusing him of a “direct attack on my character.”

Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.), who volunteered to serve in the IDF in 2015, also said supporters of Tlaib’s resolution were acting as “proxies for Hezbollah.”

In her statement Thursday, Lee said, “Yesterday on the House floor, two different Republicans basically called my sister Rashida a terrorist for nothing more than being there, being Palestinian, being Muslim, being a woman.”

She emphasized that the attacks on Tlaib followed similar remarks about congressional candidate Dr. Adam Hamawy, a retired US Army surgeon who volunteered to treat victims of Israel’s assault on Gaza and saved the life of Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) after her helicopter was shot down in Iraq in 2004.

Before voters in New Jersey’s 12th Congressional District went to the polls this week to vote in the primary the progressive Democrat won, opponents attacked him for his former association with Omar Abdel-Rahman, a cleric who was convicted of terrorism in 1995 and whom Hamawy said he met through the Egyptian-American community in New Jersey.

Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.) said Hamawy was “not in line with our values,” and The New York Times focused its subheadline on Abdel-Rahman in its report on Hamawy’s primary victory, before editing the subhead.

“The anti-Muslim rhetoric is picking up,” said Lee on Thursday. “And we don’t often talk about how dangerous that is, and we also don’t talk about how dangerous it is to our coalition. As the Democratic Party, we are supposed to be the ones that are the standard-setters, the ones who are fighting for justice and equal opportunity and liberation, and if we aren’t able to speak up against this right now, then how can we continue to hold that particular mantle?”

“It’s not just Republicans who are dealing in this,” she added. “I’ve heard Democrats use and deal in some of the worst tropes and stereotypes of my Muslim colleagues.”

Lee was applauded for speaking out about attacks that Democratic leaders had not directly addressed—and that Jeffries was accused of amplifying recently when he said he planned to speak to Hamawy about “his past affiliations.”

“Incredibly brave stuff for Summer to explicitly name and condemn Democratic Islamophobia and do so on broad terms,” said organizer and writer Cole Sandick. “I hope more elected progressives follow her lead.”

Lee emphasized that “no marginalized person should have to deal with the abuse that they are dealing with daily from the White House on down, by themselves.”

“So I just really hope that we can be as clear about anti-Muslim hate as we are about all the other forms of hatred that we’re fighting back right now,” she added, “and recognize that our liberation is tied together.”


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