Foreign policy isn’t exactly Congress’s strong suit. Few lawmakers enter the legislature prepared to debate the ins and outs of arms transfers, trade, or international aid. On issues of war and peace, Congress has more or less abdicated its historical oversight responsibility, choosing instead to defer to the executive branch. But despite its hands-off approach, Congress has rarely been afraid to weigh in when it comes to Israel. Bills advocating additional military aid to Israel typically sail through the House and Senate, and one-sided resolutions taking Israel’s position almost always pass with a near-majority of congressional support. In fact, one of the biggest taboos on Capitol Hill has been dissenting from lockstep support for the Israeli government. Former President Barack Obama even chose to justify his continued support for Israeli military action during the Gaza war in front of an audience of American Muslims during his White House’s iftar dinner in 2014. There are some signs this consensus is beginning to waiver. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., among the nation’s most popular lawmakers, is an increasingly vocal critic of Israeli foreign policy. In 2016, he broke ranks with other presidential candidates and declined to attend the pro-Israel American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference, choosing instead to deliver a speech criticizing Israeli settlements, as well as “disproportionate” force used by the Israel Defense Forces against Palestinians in Gaza. Potential 2020 candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., also voiced criticism of Israeli military actions following the slaughter of Palestinian protesters by the IDF in April.

Five progressive House Democrats released a statement in April applauding Israeli human rights groups who urge Israeli soldiers not to obey illegal orders to open fire on unarmed protesters. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., an ambitious freshman representative who shied away from criticizing aid to Israel in an interview with The Intercept last year, declared Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s reaction to the killings morally obtuse. But criticizing Israel’s military action against Palestine is still a political risk — particularly for the less established. That hasn’t stopped Mal Hyman, a sociology professor at South Carolina’s Coker College who is running in South Carolina’s 7th Congressional District against Republican incumbent Rep. Tom Rice. Hyman faces a runoff election on June 26 against state Rep. Robert Williams, who won 41 percent of the vote to Hyman’s 30.4 percent. Hyman has been unabashed in his support for Palestinian human rights. Rather than sidelining foreign affairs, he has made the topic a feature of his campaign. After dozens of Palestinians were killed by the Israeli military during protests on the Gaza Strip in April, most members of Congress from both major parties declined to offer any public opposition to the IDF’s actions. Hyman, on the other hand, sent out a campaign email highlighting the killings and demanding that the United States broker peace talks. Despite wearing a blue protective vest, with the word “PRESS” in bold letters, Palestinian journalist Yasir Murtaja was shot in the chest by Israeli forces. He died shortly afterwards. Murtaja, one of the few journalists remaining in Gaza, had been meticulously covering the increasingly deteriorating situation. Last week, thousands of Palestinians in Gaza peacefully marched towards the barricade that segregates Jews from Arabs, to raise awareness of the brutal blockade that has been in effect since 2007. These protesters were also demanding the right to return to their homes which they have been expelled from (mandated by the U.N.) since the 1940s. … Although the situation in Gaza appears increasingly dire by the day, the US has the power to broker peace talks. … But first, it must abandon its colonial mentality. This kind of directional shift would serve to strengthen America’s image abroad which would, in turn, lead to greater security at home.

“There’s a big disconnect between where the American people are on Israel and where the American media is.”

According to the fundraising chair for Hyman’s campaign, Esha Krishnaswamy, voters in the 7th District have generally responded well to the candidate’s outspokenness on Israel. “Given the overwhelmingly positive response we got from the email (including an endorsement from a Holocaust survivor), there’s a big disconnect between where the American people are on Israel and where the American media is,” she told The Intercept. In fact, Krishnaswamy said Hyman’s public rebuke of Israeli human rights abuses have helped the campaign fundraise more than any other issue. But that’s not what has motivated Hyman to speak out. “It’s just an important issue,” Hyman told The Intercept. “[America’s policy on Israel] weakens American security, it weakens the State of Israel in the long run. It’s a gross violation of human rights. And if we don’t speak out against colonialism, it will worsen.” He added, “As somebody that was raised Jewish that sees what’s going on, it’s a little easier for me to raise the issues. So I have a greater obligation to say the obvious.” But to get a national platform, he first has to get through Tuesday’s runoff. Two weeks ago, Hyman finished second out of four in the district’s Democratic primary — around 4,000 votes behind first-place vote-getter Williams. Hyman was the district’s Democratic nominee in 2016, when the incumbent GOP representative, Rice, defeated him by a 22-point margin. But 2018 is a very different year for Democrats. Just look at the nearby 5th Congressional District: Then-incumbent Republican Rep. Mick Mulvaney easily won the district in 2016 by more than 20 points. But during the June 2017 special election to replace Mulvaney, the GOP held the district by just a little over three points. “Archie Parnell ran a good race,” Hyman told The Intercept, referring to the 2017 Democratic challenger in Mulvaney’s old district. If the same wave-year dynamics hold in the 7th District, Hyman, while a long shot, may still have a chance. But Hyman also noted that Parnell, a former banker, put around $400,000 of his own money into the race, something that Hyman, a college professor, won’t be able to do. If Hyman were to win the general election, his background would distinguish him significantly from other federal lawmakers. Before graduate school, he taught at a medium-security men’s prison — an eye-opening experience that he says got him interested in progressive movement organizing. In 1986, Hyman first traveled to Nicaragua with a group called Witness for Peace. He continued to travel abroad to conflict zones over the next decade. “[I] realized I was learning more from those trips than I was learning from grad school classes,” he recollected. “Each trip, I think I became a little bit wiser and a little bit more bold. By 1989, I volunteered to work human rights with the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee during the first intifada.”

“I saw my country on the wrong side of history, supporting colonial power.”