Haim Saban
Haim SabanReuters

Haim Saban, a major donor to the Democratic Party, is backing a bill that would slash funding to the Palestinian Authority unless it stops payments to terrorists jailed for attacks on Israelis.

The participation of the Israeli-American entertainment mogul in the initiative of the lobbying affiliate of the Israeli-American Council is significant because Democrats have until now been reluctant to back the bill as it stands.

A statement Monday evening from the Israeli-American Coalition for Action said the campaign to pass the Taylor Force Act will draw on a “nationwide grassroots network of activists” and on the IASC’s “relationships with prominent Israeli-Americans and Jewish-Americans, including Sheldon Adelson, Shawn Evenhaim, Haim Saban and Adam Milstein — who have advocated for the legislation with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle.”

Taylor Force was an American killed last year in a stabbing attack in Tel Aviv.

Two bills, in the Senate and the U.S. House of Representatives, have until recently had almost solely Republican backing. However, Democrats in Congress have in recent days suggested they may back the bill. Sen. Ben Cardin, D-Md., the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee, suggested last week that he would like to see changes. Cardin’s office has not responded to a JTA query about which changes he is seeking.

A number of pro-Israel groups are backing the Act, including the Zionist Organization of America, the Orthodox Union, the Republican Jewish Coalition, and Christians United for Israel. However, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, the powerhouse among pro-Israel groups, has yet to fully embrace it although it too appears to be edging closer. “We are encouraged by the efforts in Congress to reach a bipartisan agreement that will ensure passage of the Taylor Force legislation,” AIPAC spokesman Marshall Wittmann, said last week.

The bill would cut all US funding to the PA except that earmarked for the PA police, some $60 million in 2013, a fraction of the approximately $500 million Palestinians have received annually from the United States.

Israeli officials, including Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, publicly decry the payments to families of jailed and slain attackers but have also reportedly quietly counseled against major cuts, seeing the Palestinian Authority as a force for stability in Judea and Samaria.

Saban and Adelson, a casino magnate, have been major backers of the IAC, which has in recent years rapidly grown as an umbrella body for Israeli-Americans.