More than 100 supporters of Minnesota Rep. Ilhan Omar gathered Wednesday to stand in solidarity with the freshman Democrat and her policy positions on Israel and Palestine amid a rocky first three months in Congress.
"When somebody has our back we need to have their back," Ayaan Dahir, an organizer with the Young Muslim Collective, told the crowd. "She's standing up to powerful people for human rights."
Omar angered fellow Democrats and drew attacks from Republicans after a tweet and later a public comment, both in February, that many prominent Democrats and Jewish leaders criticized for using anti-Semitic tropes. In response, the U.S. House passed a resolution broadly condemning bigotry. Omar, who supported the resolution, has denied holding anti-Semitic views.
Wednesday's gathering outside the Urban League office in north Minneapolis sought to counter that criticism. The rally, which included a potluck, poetry readings and a panel on policy, was hosted by a coalition of local organizations focused on social and racial justice, including several that support Palestinian rights. Omar was not at the meeting and a spokesman said her office was not affiliated with the event.
Organizers said the goal was to demonstrate that, despite headlines, the first-term congresswoman and the issues she supports maintain a strong base in the metro-area congressional district that elected her by a landslide in 2018. They also wanted to put a spotlight on the policies she supports. Demonstrators lined Plymouth Avenue in north Minneapolis, waving signs voicing support for Omar, Palestine and Venezuela as organizers led chants espousing her right to free speech. Cars honking in solidarity were met with cheers.
"The whole point of it is to support her and defend her right to speak out and to highlight the issues she's been supporting," said Mel Reeves, a local political activist involved in putting on the meeting.
Omar's supporters praised her stances on a range of domestic and foreign issues. Her refusal to recognize Venezuela's interim president and a recent clash with former diplomat Elliott Abrams were hailed as courageous. They also cheered her push to get the Trump administration to continue a program that, if expired, would have led to the deportation of thousands of local Liberians.
The uproar over Omar's widely criticized tweets and comments on Israel and American Jews also took center stage. Several speakers condemned the political influence of groups that they say support Israel to the detriment of Palestinians in the Middle East.