The billion-dollar settlement ensures the State Department will adhere to the Taylor Force Act, which prevents the United States from sending financial aid to the Palestinian Authority’s Martyrs Fund.
| PULSE POINTS |
❓ WHAT HAPPENED: The State Department has settled a lawsuit regarding $1.5 billion dollars of taxpayer money given to the Palestinian Authority under the former Biden government. 📺 DETAIL: Filed in December 2022 by Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-TX), the parents of Taylor Force, and terror survivor Sarri Singer, the Biden government was accused of “unlawfully laundering U.S. taxpayer funds through non-governmental organizations to directly benefit the Palestinian Authority” in circumvention of the Taylor Force Act 2018, a law passed under President Donald J. Trump which prevents the United States from giving financial aid to the Palestinian Authority until it dissolves its Martyrs Fund. Critics have long argued that the fund incentivizes terrorism as it provides money to the families of those killed in attacks on Israelis. The law is named after Taylor Force, an American Army veteran murdered by a Palestinian terrorist while in Jaffa, Israel, in early 2016. “When President Trump signed the Taylor Force Act into law in 2018, the United States made clear it would not tolerate or reward terrorism—yet Joe Biden’s decision to ignore that law put American lives at risk,” said Rep. Jackson about the case. The settlement was secured by America First Legal, a non-profit public interest organization founded by Stephen Miller, the current White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy. 💬 KEY QUOTE: “As a victim of terrorism and a survivor of a Hamas bus bombing, I have lived with the painful reality that the person who carried out the attack against me is not only honored, but that his family receives monthly payments… This settlement brings a level of accountability and helps ensure that the U.S. is not contributing, even indirectly, to incentivizing terror.” – Sarri Singer, a survivor of a Hamas bus bombing 🎯 IMPACT: The State Department will abide by the Taylor Force Act 2018 for the next 10 years. The Palestinian Authority’s Martyrs Fund, referred to by critics as a “Pay to Slay” scheme, will be impacted by the State Department’s renewed commitment to the act as the U.S. ceases financial aid. |
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