SKDK, a prominent Democratic public affairs firm, has cut short its $600,000 contract with the Israeli government, which was meant to last from April to March. The firm had been promoting Israel’s perspective on the Gaza conflict, initially focusing on media efforts to highlight the Bibas family tragedy and later shifting to promoting Israel’s narrative on news shows.
The firm’s work initially involved media efforts to raise the profile of the Bibas family, three members of whom were killed while in captivity in Gaza. SKDK then changed its focus to pitching guests for news shows to hear Israel’s side of the war in Gaza. The $600,000 contract with the Israeli government, first reported by POLITICO in March, was supposed to last from April of this year through March.
SKDK has worked for several pro-Israel efforts over the years, but this was the first time it represented the Israeli government itself. It collaborated with Havas, a European advertising and PR firm, on behalf of Lapam, the Israeli government advertising agency, with the ultimate client being the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
“SKDK stopped this work on Aug. 31 and has begun the process of de-registering,” a spokesperson for SKDK said in a statement. The spokesperson declined to comment on why it was ending its work, saying only that the work “had run its course.”
SKDK’s announcement came one day after the investigative news outlet Sludge reported that one aspect of its work was setting up a bot program to amplify pro-Israel narratives on Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, YouTube, and other platforms. The story linked to a Foreign Agents Registration Act filing that showed that Stagwell, the parent company of SKDK, agreed to perform such work.
But SKDK and Stagwell both said they did not work on a bot initiative. “Our work focused solely on media relations and nothing else,” the SKDK spokesperson said.
A spokesperson for the Israeli embassy in Washington didn’t respond to a request for comment. Havas and Lapam also didn’t respond.