Uncommitted holds sit-in outside Democratic convention after Palestinians denied a speaker
Movement launched protest after party rejected requests for Palestinian American to speak on the main stage
“We
 didn’t come here to do a sit-in, we’re just sitting here waiting for a 
call,” Alawieh said. The participants planned to remain in place after 
Wednesday evening’s convention program ended close to midnight.
Some
 elected officials have spoken in support of their demand, tweeting that
 after the family of Israeli hostages got time to share their story that
 evening, so too should a Palestinian.
Baraa
 Hadi Abu Alroos, seven, who was injured in Rafah and lost his father 
and grandfather, at a protest in support of Palestinians in Gaza at the 
DNC. Photograph: Eduardo Muñoz/Reuters
Representative
 Ilhan Omar joined the group on the pavement for a time. Representative 
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called in via FaceTime to say the request was 
reasonable and no should not be the final answer. Jewish supporters of 
the movement have also joined in the call for a Palestinian American 
speaker.
The uncommitted delegates, who 
represent hundreds of thousands of anti-war protest votes from the 
primary season, have worked this week to convince Harris delegates to 
join their cause and sign a petition calling for a ceasefire, dubbing 
their broader group as “ceasefire delegates”.
They initially asked for Dr Tanya Haj-Hassan, a doctor who worked in Gaza,
 to speak from the main stage and have now pushed for a Palestinian 
American to give a speech there. The DNC offered them a panel on the 
sidelines of the convention, but not a spot on the main stage.
The
 family of Israeli American hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin, who was 
kidnapped by Hamas on 7 October, spoke on the stage on Wednesday, which 
the uncommitted movement supported.
“Uncommitted
 delegates urge the Democratic party to reject a hierarchy of human 
value by ensuring Palestinian voices are heard on the main stage. We are
 learning that Israeli hostages’ families will be speaking from the main
 stage,” the delegates said in an earlier statement.
“We
 strongly support that decision and also strongly hope that we will also
 be hearing from Palestinians who’ve endured the largest civilian death 
toll since 1948.”
As the broader party 
faithful streamed out of the arena cheering and smiling, they 
encountered the sit-in outside the United Center. Some in the movement 
held banners saying “not another bomb” and “arms embargo now” facing the
 arena exits.