Tlaib, AOC call for Treasury to strip tax-exempt status from U.S. charities ‘supporting’ Israeli settlements

Progressive Democrats claim groups’ tax-exempt non-profit status amounts to a US “subsidy” of “illegal Israeli settlement enterprise.”

By The Algemeiner

US Representatives Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and five other Democrats have called for the U.S .Treasury to stop granting tax exemptions to American charitable organizations active in the West Bank and eastern Jerusalem.

In a recent letter sent to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, the group expressed their “extreme concern that US charities are funding and providing direct support to Israeli organizations that are working to expand and perpetuate Israel’s illegal settlement enterprise in violation of international law, including supporting the dispossession and forced displacement of Palestinians from occupied East Jerusalem neighborhoods.”

“We are concerned that these policies violate US obligations under international law, as well as federal tax law,” the letter read.

“Yellen must act to enforce US law and end these organizations’ status,” tweeted Tlaib, who signed the letter along with Democratic Reps. Ocasio-Cortez, Cori Bush (MO) André Carson (IN), Mark Pocan (WI), Ayanna Pressley (MA), and Betty McCollum (MN).

The group alleged that the groups’ tax-exempt non-profit status amounts to an effective “subsidy” from the US government to fund “serious breaches of international law and violations of internationally recognized human rights related to the expansion of the illegal Israeli settlement enterprise.”

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The letter specifically listed the Central Fund of Israel (CFI) as among those groups it charged with “fueling the dispossession and displacement of Palestinians,” as well as American Friends of Beit El.

The lawmakers called for Yellen to commit to providing House Foreign Affairs Committee members with a list of American charities “operating directly or indirectly in any occupied territory,” and to answer a series of questions by August 22.