We Spoke to the Palestinian American Refused a DNC Speech

The Uncommitted movement put forward Georgia State Rep. Ruwa Romman to speak on the horrors in Gaza at the DNC last month. The party refused to let her speak. We talked with her about the refusal and the future of the Democrats and Palestine.

Portrait of Ruwa Romman. (ruwa4georgia.com)


As the Uncommitted delegates pushed for a Palestinian speaker at the Democratic National Convention (DNC) last month, Georgia state representative Ruwa Romman emerged as the top contender. As someone willing to endorse Vice President Kamala Harris while also uplifting the Palestinian cause and telling her personal story, she seemed a diplomatic choice — someone who could please most of the messy coalition that makes up her party, given her track record as a loyal Democrat willing to work within the system.

In the speech that she would have given — a draft of which was leaked to and published by Mother Jones that week — Romman would have told the delegates about her Palestine-born grandfather and the pain of seeing Palestinians massacred and displaced. She also would have described the hope contained in this awful moment, witnessing “something profound: a beautiful, multiracial, multifaith and multigenerational coalition rising from despair within our Democratic Party.” She would not have called for an arms embargo to Israel.

Many at the convention supported Romman and the Uncommitted movement. Delegates wore keffiyehs and waved Palestinian flags in support of an arms embargo and for the inclusion of Romman as a speaker. But that “many” didn’t include the cautious centrists — most importantly Harris herself — or the big donors who make the decisions for the party who have been fine to continue greenlighting Israel’s bloodletting. After extensive organizing, on the last day of the convention, the word on Romman’s speech came back from the party: no.

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