AIPAC Donors Flood Last-Minute New Jersey House Pick With Cash - Abolish Capital!
Former Lieutenant Governor Tahesha Way is not the clear front-runner in New
Jersey’s special congressional election on Thursday. She’s seventh in
fundraising out of 10 candidates as of last week’s Federal Election Commission
deadline, and public polling
[https://www.courthousenews.com/crowded-democratic-field-leaves-no-clear-leader-in-new-jersey-house-race/]
has been sparse. But as the race drew close to the finish line, the Israel lobby
made her the beneficiary of a last-minute push. In the final weeks before the
election, an Intercept analysis has found, 30 donors to groups including the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee, its super PAC, and Democratic Majority
for Israel have poured more than $50,000 into Way’s campaign. On Friday, amid
the fundraising push and less than a week before the election, DMFI officially
endorsed her. The lobby is known for spending against progressives and the most
vocal critics of the state of Israel, but in New Jersey, it appears to be
backing one moderate to pick off another. Yet more pro-Israel money in the race
comes at the expense of Tom Malinowski, who is no progressive on Israel policy
but nevertheless has become the subject of AIPAC ire — marking a reversal for
the group, which supported him in 2022. AIPAC’s super PAC, United Democracy
Project, has spent more $2.3 million on ads against Malinowski**.** The ads do
not mention Israel but attack Malinowski on immigration, saying he helped fund
“Trump’s deportation force” because he voted in favor of a 2019 bipartisan
appropriations bill that funded the Department of Homeland Security. The
majority of Democrats, including many supported by AIPAC, voted for the bill. In
a statement to The Intercept, UDP spokesperson Patrick Dorton made no mention of
Malinowski’s DHS funding vote. He said Malinowski had fallen afoul of the
group’s policy priorities by discussing the possibility
[https://jewishinsider.com/2025/11/tom-malinowski-mikie-sherrill-special-election-new-jersey/]
of conditioning aid to Israel. “It’s our goal to build the largest bipartisan
pro-Israel majority in Congress. There are several candidates in this race far
more pro-Israel than Tom Malinowski,” Dorton said.
[https://theintercept.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/GettyImages-1133492421-e1766079504843.jpg?w=440&h=440&crop=1]
Related ------- ### AIPAC Is Retreating From Endorsements and Election Spending.
It Won’t Give Up Its Influence.
[https://theintercept.com/2025/12/30/aipac-campaigns-elections-israel-congress/]
Way and Malinowski are competing in a crowded race in New Jersey’s 11th
Congressional District to replace former Rep. Mikie Sherrill, who vacated the
seat after she was elected governor
[https://theintercept.com/2025/11/05/briefing-podcast-democrats-election-results-zohran-mamdani/].
Way and Malinowski’s campaigns did not respond to The Intercept’s requests for
comment. Also running are Analilia Mejia, the former political director for Sen.
Bernie Sanders’s 2020 presidential campaign; veteran Zach Beecher; Passaic
County commissioner and election lawyer John Bartlett; former Morris Township
Mayor Jeff Grayzel; and Essex County Commissioner Brendan Gill. Way already had
substantial support from the Democratic Lieutenant Governors Association, which
endorsed her and has spent more than $1.7 million backing her campaign, almost
half of what it spent in total last cycle. But even with close to $4 million in
outside spending on her side, she has lagged behind her opponents in
fundraising. She’s raised just over $400,000 — compared to Malinowski’s over
$1.1 million, more than $800,000 for Gill, and over half a million for Beecher.
Bartlett has raised more than $460,000, Grayzel has raised $428,000, and Mejia
has raised just over $420,000. Now, pro-Israel donors who have given to AIPAC to
boost other pro-Israel candidates are trying to help Way close the gap. They
include retired investor Peter Langerman, who has given $75,000 to AIPAC’s
United Democracy Project since 2023 and $12,000 to AIPAC since 2022. Another Way
donor, Florida loan executive Joel Edelstein, has given $25,000 to UDP since
2023 and $$3,500 to AIPAC since 2022. Among Way’s other donors are Bennett
Greenspan, founder of the genealogy company Family Tree DNA, who has given
$40,000 to United Democracy Project, $4,000 to DMFI PAC, and $1,250 to AIPAC PAC
since 2022. Way donor and New Jersey real estate developer Michael Gottlieb gave
$25,000 to UDP in 2023. Another Way donor, founder and former president of
Microsoft partner HSO, Jack Ades, has given $10,750 to AIPAC since 2024.
Gottlieb and Ades have given to Republican candidates including Reps. Mike
Lawler and Elise Stefanik in New York; Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La.; Nikki Haley’s
presidential campaign; and the Republican group WinRed
[https://theintercept.com/2025/05/14/kari-lake-campaign-donations-refunds-chargebacks-winred/].
> More than half of these contributions all landed on January 14. More than half
of the contributions to Way — $33,000 of the $53,000 in total — all landed on
January 14, a common sign that outside groups have sent out a fundraising push
to their network**.** Another donor to Way’s campaign is Joseph Korn, a New
Jersey real estate developer who served on the New Jersey board of the Jewish
National Fund, a controversial national organization that has funded settler
groups
[https://mondoweiss.net/2025/01/how-the-jewish-national-fund-abets-u-s-sanctioned-settlers/]
in the West Bank. Way is campaigning on a relatively centrist platform that
primarily includes fighting against President Donald Trump’s agenda. She’s also
running on strengthening the Affordable Care Act, ensuring access to
reproductive care, protecting democracy and voting rights, and lowering costs
without raising taxes, including raising the cap on state and local tax
deductions, or SALT. Her website does not mention foreign policy or Israel. Way
is also endorsed by the Congressional Black Caucus PAC; the Democratic
Association of Secretaries of State; IVYPAC, which backs candidates who are
members of the historically Black Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority; and several other
New Jersey organizations. The Israel lobby’s support for Way may not ultimately
help its policy priorities. As a recent column
[https://forward.com/opinion/802459/tom-malinowski-analilia-mejia-new-jersry-primary-aipac/]
in the Forward points out, by pitting Way and Malinowski against each other,
AIPAC donors might help a more progressive candidate get elected. The post AIPAC
Donors Flood Last-Minute New Jersey House Pick With Cash
[https://theintercept.com/2026/02/04/aipac-new-jersey-israel-lobby-donors/]
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