(RNS) Bernie Sanders is the only Jewish candidate in the presidential field of two Democrats and three Republicans, and he will also be the only one not addressing next week’s annual meeting of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee.
But unlike the 40 or so rabbis planning to boycott the AIPAC conference over the appearance on Monday of top GOP contender Donald Trump, Sanders said he couldn’t come because of a scheduling conflict.
“I would very much have enjoyed speaking at the AIPAC conference,” Sanders said in a letter sent Friday (March 18) to AIPAC head Robert Cohen.
“Obviously, issues impacting Israel and the Middle East are of the utmost importance to me, to our country and to the world,” said Sanders, the lone Democratic challenger to Hillary Clinton.
But Sanders said he was going to be campaigning out West and would have to send a printed copy of his remarks to the 18,000 attendees because AIPAC will not allow speakers to address the Washington conference by video link.
The Jewish Telegraphic Agency, which first reported on Sanders’ letter, noted that AIPAC, a leading pro-Israel organization, has allowed presidential candidates to deliver speeches remotely in past elections — most recently in 2012 when Mitt Romney spoke via satellite.
(David Gibson is a national reporter for RNS)