In a 1990 column, Ellison accused a college president of stifling free speech for criticizing a guest speaker's remarks. The guest speaker was Kwame Ture (also known as Stokely Carmichael), who said that Zionists worked with the Nazis during World War II and that "Zionism must be destroyed."
"The Zionists joined with the Nazis in murdering Jews, so they would flee to Palestine," said True, according to one account by the Anti-Defamation League.
University of Minnesota President Nils Hasselmo called the statements offensive. Ellison said Hasselmo's remarks did not offer any "factual" refutation of Ture's comments.
Ellison also previously defended Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan by writing multiple articles arguing he is not anti-Semitic. Since entering Congress, Ellison has tried to distance himself from both Farrakhan and the Nation of Islam, drawing ire from the group.
During a 2008 trip to Saudi Arabia, Ellison met with an Islamic cleric who endorsed the killing of U.S. soldiers. Pictures of the trip show Ellison met with Sheikh Abdallah Bin Bayyah, who issued a fawta in 2004 that urged jihad against U.S. forces in Iraq. Ellison's office told investigators of the House Ethics Committee that he did not participate in any "official" meetings.
The Minnesota Democrat also met with the president of a bank used to pay the families of Palestinian suicide bombers while in Saudi Arabia.
The trip was funded by an organization that has ties to the Muslim Brotherhood.
Ellison said in 1992 that black Americans do not have an obligation to obey the government because it considers them "less than human."
He made the comment after police officers were acquitted in the beating of Rodney King and protests broke out nationwide.
Ellison also told protesters that black people do not live in a democracy.
Ellison once wrote a column
that called the U.S. Constitution the "best evidence of a white racist
conspiracy to subjugate other peoples."
Mother Jones interviewed a former classmate of Ellison's who claimed that the Minnesota Democrat said that Jews want to oppress minorities all over the world. Michael Olenick, Ellison's former classmate, said Ellison's argument was that "an oppressed group could not be racist toward Jews because Jews were themselves oppressors," according to Mother Jones.
Olenick went on to describe how Ellison would frequently talk about how European white Jews were the oppressors and bring up Jewish slave traders in conversation.
Below is an article by Alan M. Dershowitz, the Felix
Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus, at Harvard Law School and author of “Taking the Stand: My Life in the
Law” and “Electile Dysfunction: A Guide for
the Unaroused Voter.”
Tomorrow the Democratic National Committee
(DNC) will have to choose the direction of the Democratic Party, as well as its
likely composition. It will be among the most important choices the DNC has
ever had to make.
There has been powerful push from the
hard-left of the Democratic Party, led by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), to elect
Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) chairman. If he is elected, I will quit the
party after 60 years of loyal association and voting. I will become an
independent, continuing to vote for the best candidates, most of whom, I
assume, will still be Democrats. But I will not contribute to the DNC or
support it as an institution.
My loyalty to my country and my principles and
my heritage exceeds any loyalty to my party. I will urge other
like-minded people — centrist liberals — to follow my lead and quit the
Democratic Party if Ellison is elected chairman. We will not be leaving
the Democratic Party we have long supported. The Democratic Party will be
leaving us!
Let me explain the reasons for
this difficult decision.
Ellison has a long history of sordid
association with anti-Semitism. He worked with and repeatedly defended one
of a handful of the most notorious and public anti-Semites in our country:
The Reverend Louis Farrakhan. And worked with Farrakhan at
the very time this anti-Semite was publicly describing Judaism as a “gutter religion” and insisting that the Jews were a primary force
in the African slave trade.
Ellison has publicly stated that he was unaware of Farrakhan’s
anti-Semitism. That is not a credible statement. Everyone was aware
of Farrakhan’s anti-Semitism. Farrakhan did not try to hide it.
Indeed, he proclaimed it on every occasion. Ellison is either lying
or he willfully blinded himself to what was obvious to everyone else.
Neither of these qualities makes him suitable to be the next chairman of
the DNC.
Moreover, Ellison himself has made
anti-Semitic statements. A prominent lawyer, with significant
credibility, told me that while he was a law student, Ellison approached her
and said he could not respect her, because she was a Jew and because she was a
woman who should not be at a law school. This woman immediately disclosed
that anti-Semitic and anti-feminists statement to her husband and friends, and
I believe she is telling the truth.
Ellison’s anti-Semitism is confirmed by his support for another
anti-Semite, Stokely Carmichael.
When there were protests about Carmichael’s
speaking at the University of Minnesota, Ellison responded that: “The
University's position appears to be this: Political Zionism is off-limits no
matter what dubious circumstances Israel was founded under; no matter what the
Zionists do to the Palestinians; and no matter what wicked regimes Israel
allies itself with — like South Africa. This position is untenable."
But the connections are more recent as well.
In 2009, Ellison headlined a fundraiser for Esam Omeish, a former candidate for
Virginia state delegate who had told Palestinians that “the jihad way is the
way to liberate your land.”
With regard to Israel, Ellison was one of only
a small number of Congress people who recently voted against funding
the Iron Dome, a missile system used by Israel to protect its civilians against
rocket attacks by Hamas and Hezbollah. His voting record with regard to
the Nation State of the Jewish people is among the very worst in Congress.
Ellison is now on an apology tour as he runs for DNC chairman, but his
apologies and renunciations of his past association with anti-Semitism have
been tactical and timed to his political aspirations.
He first claimed to realize that
Farrakhan was an anti-Semite when he ran for office in 2006 seeking Jewish support. His claim to be
a supporter of Israel was timed to coincide with
his run for the chairmanship of DNC. I do not trust him. I do not
believe him. And neither should centrist liberal supporters of Israel and
opponents of anti-Semitism.
The DNC has a momentous choice this weekend.
It can move the party in the direction of Jeremy Corbyn’s labor party in
England, in the hope of attracting Jill Stein Green Party voters and
millennials who stayed home. In doing so they would be giving up on any
attempt to recapture the working class and rust-belt voters in the mid-western
states that turned the Electoral College over to Donald
Trump.
Jeremy Corbyn today could not get elected dog
catcher in Great Britain. I do not want to see the Democratic Party
relegated to permanent minority status as a hard-left fringe.
Remember what happened when the Democrats
moved left by nominating George McGovern, Walter Mondale and Michael Dukakis —
all good men. The total combined electoral votes for these candidates
would not have won a single election. There is no reason to think the
country has moved so far to the left since those days that the Democrats can
win by pushing even further in the direction of the hard left. The
self-destructive election of Keith Ellison will be hard to undo for many years.
So, tomorrow, the Democrats must choose
between electing Ellison or keeping centrist liberals, who support Israel, like
me and many others in their party. I hope they choose wisely. But
if they do not, I have made my choice.
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