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Cori Bush Bashes AIPAC On Her Way Out, Says Pro-Israel Group ‘Cheated’ St. Louis Voters

US Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) raises her fist as US Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) addresses a pro-Hamas demonstration in Washington, DC. Photo: Reuters/Allison Bailey

Outgoing Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) blasted the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) during a radio interview, accusing the foremost pro-Israel lobbying firm engaging in practices that “cheated the people of St. Louis”

While chatting with St. Louis Public Radio on Dec. 23, Bush argued that her August election loss was the result of a rapid influx of pro-Israel money. 

“The amount of money that was spent against me made my race the second most expensive House race in U.S. history. You know, not in the last decade. Not, you know, several years. In U.S. History,” Bush said. 

“So, the fact that they spent 15 times as much—people like me have to understand this. I spent around $1.4 million when I unseated my predecessor, $1.4 million. And I won by a little less than 5,000 votes,” she added. 

She lamented that AIPAC reportedly spent a staggering $15,000,000 against her “to win by 6,800 votes.” 

“So this is the thing that really bothers me about this. If someone wants to run, I have no problem with that,” she said, conceding that political opponents might have better “ideas” than her. 

However, Bush fretted that her opponent, U.S. Representative-elect Wesley Bell, supposedly entered the race out of frustration over her anti-Israel positions. She suggested that AIPAC hand-picked Bell to run against her because she called for a “ceasefire” between Israel and the Hamas terrorist group in the immediate aftermath of the Oct. 7 slaughters in the Jewish state. 

“He came out and said that the reason why he was running against me was because I called for a ceasefire. That was initially what he said. But never once did any of their ads say anything about Israel, Gaza, ceasefire,” Bush said. 

The congresswoman pointed out that ads funded by AIPAC focused primarily on “ridiculous things” like her legislative record and issues more proximate to the people of St. Louis, such as contamination in the city’s drinking water.

“They lied about my record. They spewed disinformation and misinformation about my work,” she said, accusing AIPAC of helping Bell win by spreading “lies” and “fabrications.” 

Bush lost her reelection campaign to St. Louis attorney Wesley Bell in August while making her opposition to Israel a key talking point of the race. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) flooded the race with a staggering sum  of money to secure her defeat. 

Bush’s conduct in the immediate aftermath of Hamas’s’ atrocities on Oct. 7 drew widespread condemnation from pro-Israel leaders and convinced AIPAC to intervene in her primary contest. Only nine days after the massacre, Bush called for an “immediate ceasefire” between Israel and the Palestinian terrorist group. As the war dragged on, her rhetoric toward Israel sharpened, with the congresswoman accusing the Jewish state of committing “genocide” in Gaza and “apartheid” in the West Bank. Bush has also accused Israel of inflicting a “famine” in Gaza without providing evidence.

Bush’s anti-Israel stance incensed the St. Louis Jewish community, causing a cohort of 30 local rabbis to write a letter repudiating Bush and endorsing Bell. In the letter, the rabbis slammed Bush for “continually fanned the flames with the most outrageous smears of Israel, accusing the Jewish state of ‘ethnic cleansing’ and ‘genocide’ as it has fought to defeat the terrorists.”

The post Cori Bush Bashes AIPAC On Her Way Out, Says Pro-Israel Group ‘Cheated’ St. Louis Voters first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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