By Sameea Kamal
CHICAGO (CALMATTERS) โ What will Kamala Harris do about the Gaza war if sheโs elected president? To some Californians watching, the best indicator might be what sheโs doing now.
The vice president seemed to take a stronger stance against Israelโs military response since Hamasโ attack on Oct. 7 โ calling for a ceasefire before President Joe Biden did and skipped Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahuโs speech before Congress in July. After meeting him, said she pressed him for a ceasefire and pledged not to stay silent about the humanitarian crisis.
But then came her shutdown of Pro-Palestinian protesters at a campaign rally this month in Michigan. And, perhaps most importantly, she declined to support an arms embargo on weapons sold to Israel.
The mixed messaging has had mixed reactions from those who oppose the war at this weekโs Democratic National Convention in Chicago, with delegates and protesters from California seeking different ways to pressure the party for change.
Inside the convention hall, some delegates want the party platform to call for the arms embargo, though the one adopted on a voice vote Monday does not include it.
Joseph Salas, a delegate from California, said he wants a stronger stand from Harris and wants to see the party acknowledge Palestiniansโ loss of land in its platform. โWe need to hold our elected officials accountable to the platform we write,โ he said.
On the streets outside the United Center, hundreds of protestors marched Monday to send a message to Democratic leaders.
The demonstrators included Wassim Hage, a community leader with the San Francisco-based Arab Resource and Organizing Center, who traveled to Chicago not for the convention, but for the March on DNC, arranged by a coalition that included labor, gender justice and other groups.
Hage said he sees an opportunity in activism from within the party and those on the outside: โWe are watching the cracks in the Democratic Party establishment emerge, and I think our goal is to pressure those cracks, to make sure that support for Israel, support for Zionism in the short-term and the long-term is not, is not tenable for American politicians.โ
While ceasefire talks continue, as of this week, Israelโs military has killed 40,000 people, a quarter of them reported to be children, the Associated Press reports.
According to the Council on Foreign Relations, since October, the United States has allocated at least $12.5 billion in military aid to Israel, and has provisionally agreed to provide Israel with $3.8 billion per year through 2028. As of June, the U.S. had pledged $674 million in humanitarian aid to Palestinians since October.
For many attending the convention, the choice between Harris and former president Donald Trump is an obvious one โ and one theyโre excited about, donning Harris-emblazoned shirts and other fashion accessories.
But for others for whom the conflict is central, the path forward weighs heavy.
Sabrene Odeh, an uncommitted delegate from Washington state, said for her to vote for Harris, she wants to see tangible movement on the Gaza issue.
โA lot of folks have been talking about sympathetic words, feelings, vibes,โ said Odeh, who is Palestinian. โThat, unfortunately, doesnโt save lives, and we need lives saved now.โ
Even though the convention adopted the party platform, Liano Sharon, a delegate from Michigan, said some still plan to push for language that would include a ceasefire plus an arms embargo, which was a main point of contention during the public drafting phase, the Washington Post reports.
The platform currently states that Democrats โcommitment to Israelโs security, its qualitative military edge, its right to defend itself, and the 2016 Memorandum of Understanding is ironclad.โ
The platform also states the party recognizes the worth of every innocent life, โwhether Israeli or Palestinian.โ
Separate from the platform push, delegates from around the U.S. are collecting signatures on a letter asking Harris to โturn the page on President Bidenโs policy on Gaza.โ One delegate who signed the letter Sunday said there were about 150 signatures at that point.
In his convention speech Monday night, Biden said heโs โworking around the clockโ to end civilian suffering, โfinally deliver a ceasefire and end this war.โ He also said that protestors on the streets โhave a point. A lot of innocent people are being killed, on both sides.โ

But delegates arenโt the only ones in action this week.
Kitzia Esteva, an organizer with the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance from San Francisco, said that they flew to Chicago because the plight of Palestinians intersects with a lot of important movements.
โThe funding that goes to those things is in direct correlation to the funding we donโt receive for our communities, from things like healthcare, like access to reproductive care, like access to childcare,โ they said.
โYet weโre seeing billions upon billions of dollars going to killing and to literally breaking down the infrastructures of care that Palestinians have,โ they said.
Esteva said Harris has a history of being pushed to support more progressive policies, including on climate issues: โI think all of those things didnโt happen because of the goodness of her heart or even her political leanings, but because we were a steady drum intervening and really pushing her to right side of history.โ
Fatima Iqbal-Zubair, chairperson of the California Democratic Partyโs Progressive Caucus, told CalMatters last week that she had endorsed Harris and Vice President Tim Walz early on, despite her concerns about their stances on Gaza.
Under Harris and Walz, she said, โa lot of vulnerable communities will keep their rights or have more rights.โ
