AIPAC policy conference
AIPAC policy conferenceReuters

MoveOn, the progressive advocacy movement, asked Democratic presidential candidates not to attend this year’s American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference.

The group on Wednesday posted a poll on Twitter of its members, showing that 74 percent of them want candidates to skip the annual AIPAC conference.

The group listed four reasons why candidates should not appear at AIPAC:

1) Its vigorous opposition to the 2015 Iran nuclear deal negotiated by President Barack Obama.

2) The fact that the featured speaker this year is Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who MoveOn says might have overseen war crimes, and who recently forged an alliance with a far-right party ahead of Israel’s elections next month.

3) AIPAC’s allowance of figures identified by some groups as "Islamophobes" to appear at its conferences.

4) AIPAC’s failure to condemn figures close to President Donald Trump believed to be in bed with the far right.

AIPAC rarely takes U.S. officials to task for anything outside the context of Israel, and it has condemned the right-wing Otzma Yehudit party that has forged an alliance with the Jewish Home party at the behest of Netanyahu. This week, AIPAC distanced itself from a scheduled speaker, pro-Israel giver Adam Milstein, who was accused of peddling Islamophobic themes on his Twitter feed. Milstein then withdrew from speaking at the conference.

“It’s time for progressives to recognize where their base stands — which means upholding progressive principles on domestic AND foreign policy,” the group said on Twitter. “Skip #AIPAC2019.”

No declared presidential candidates are scheduled to speak at the conference, and AIPAC’s policy is that presidential candidates are invited to speak only in election years. However, candidates have in past years circulated at the conference and have held private parlors to meet with activists.