Noteworthy developments since the passage of the Act and well past the initial May 31, 1999 deadline's expiration: • Of the 22 Presidential Determinations to suspend the limitations that were issued between 1998 and the fall of 2009, only the Bush era issuances included the wording: : ... while President Obama's issuances mirror the wording first used by President Clinton. • Section 214 of the Foreign Relations Authorization Act, FY 2003 states: :The U.S. Congress, however, has the "
power of the purse", and could prohibit the expenditure of funds on any embassy located outside Jerusalem. The U.S. Congress has not managed to repeat the incorporation or passage of language similar to that in Section 214, needed for any attempt to force a foreign policy change by withholding funding. • Claims have arisen that as a result of the Embassy Act, official U.S. documents and web sites refer to Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, although this has been the case in many instances before the Act became law. The
CIA World Factbook has carried the typical Federal citation concerning Israel's capital and the absence of the usual concentration of foreign embassies being within its boundaries or proximity. • A potential site for a future US Embassy office building in Jerusalem has been demarcated by Israel and the US, and is maintained in the neighborhood of
Talpiot. Until 2019, when the consulate-general was merged into the embassy, the United States had three diplomatic office facilities in Jerusalem:
a consulate on Agron Road in West Jerusalem, a consular annex on
Nablus Road in East Jerusalem, and a new office annex in the neighborhood of
Arnona, located in an area of "
no man's land" between East and West Jerusalem, which opened in October 2010. In March 2011 a new bill, the Jerusalem Embassy and Recognition Act of 2011 (
H.R. 1006), was introduced. Cosponsored by fourteen
Members of Congress, including
House Europe Subcommittee Chairman
Dan Burton (R),
House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairwoman
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen (R) and
House Middle East Subcommittee Chairman
Steve Chabot (R), the bill would discontinue the Presidential waiver authority included in the 1995 Act, relocate the
U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, and affirm the city as the undivided capital of Israel. This bill died at the end of 2011, having failed to clear the
House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Under President Trump (disapproval about US embassy moving in Jerusalem) on December 21, 2017. President
Donald Trump signed the embassy waiver on June 1, 2017. The
White House meanwhile stated that it did not represent a weakening of his support for Israel. It added that he stood by his promise of moving the embassy.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson stated that the relocation process will begin immediately, but that the relocation itself however could take years to complete. However, the announcement was condemned by Palestinian officials, including
Hanan Ashrawi and chief negotiator
Saeb Erekat, as the embassy's reopening will also coincide with the 70th anniversary of the
"Nakba". However, despite the move of the embassy to Jerusalem, President Trump signed on June 4, 2018, an executive order postponing the move of the embassy to Jerusalem, although it had already physically moved to that city. He was required to sign the order since the Jerusalem Embassy Act requires the US ambassador to have a permanent residence in Jerusalem, a condition already fulfilled as of May 8, 2019. On October 18, 2018,
United States Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the US Embassy and consulate-general in Jerusalem would be merged into a single diplomatic mission. In early March 2019, the consulate-general was formally merged into the US Embassy in Jerusalem; ending the US practice of accrediting separate diplomatic missions to the Israelis and Palestinians. A
Palestinian Affairs Unit was also established on the former Agron Street site of the consulate-general to conduct
relations with the Palestinians.
Public opinion A poll, taken in November 2017, by the
Brookings Institution found that, of a national sample of 2,000 adults, 63% of Americans polled opposed the move of the embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, while 31% supported it. Among Democrats, 81% opposed the move and 15% were in support, while among Republicans, 44% opposed the move and 49% supported it. ==See also==