THE PRO-ISRAEL LOBBY is confronting a growing problem.
The American Israel Public Affairs Committee waged a proud and public campaign to assert its dominance last cycle ā sinking more than $100 million into the 2024 elections to oust critics of Israel from Congress. AIPAC spent more on elections that cycle than any other individual single-issue interest group; celebrated its super PAC, United Democracy Project, as āone of the largest bipartisan super PACs in Americaā; and took credit for endorsing 361 pro-Israel candidates who prevailed in hundreds of races.
That success met with public disgust with Israelās genocide in Gaza and drove a massive backlash, fueling a growing movement to eradicate AIPACās influence and propel insurgent candidates to Congress on pledges to refuse the pro-Israel lobbyās support. Now, as the 2026 midterms approach, AIPAC and its preferred candidates have pulled back from the aggressive electoral strategy they pursued last time.
None of this is to say that AIPAC is planning to let its influence slip away. While the group has not yet publicly endorsed any new candidates this cycle, thereās still time, and itās working behind closed doors to boost its preferred candidatesā campaigns. Earlier this month, for example, AIPACās board president held a fundraiser for an Illinois House candidate who has said publicly that she isnāt seeking the groupās endorsement. In another district in the same state, AIPAC donors rallied around a real estate mogulās congressional campaign.



Time to swap PAC names or just funnel the money to a pre-existing one.
The only reason AIPAC exists is the prior agency had to register as an actor of a foreign government.
AIPAC started by prioritizing the members of the committee who decide what organizations have to registerā¦
And thatās the story of why AIPAC isnāt currently registered as an actor of a foreign government.
TIL ā¦
A little murkier than I rememberedā¦
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Zionist_Council
The trigger was losing tax exempt status due to being a registered foreign agent.
So they ādissolvedā it and then opened a ānewā one and never had to register so still tax exempt.
Itās overly convoluted by design. But I feel like the first comment got the gist right. Wanted to clarify for transparency tho.
CAIR definitely needs to register as a foreign agent.