Maybe he isn’t Hitler after all. That’s the upshot of the announcement by
political talk-show hosts Mika Brzezinski and Joe Scarborough after
they journeyed to the Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida this past weekend for
a chat with President-elect Donald Trump.
The pair is being roasted by critics on both the right and left (including
staffers at their own network) for seeming to back away from their
claims that Trump is a fascist seeking the destruction of democracy.
Despite all that, they were right to journey to his Florida resort, even
if it meant subjecting themselves to catcalls about kissing his ring.
More to the point, their example ought to be emulated by those who look
to them for political guidance. At a moment in history when the
political left in both the United States and Israel have adopted a
strategy of demonizing the leaders of their opponents as an organizing
principle, it’s high time for opinion leaders to stop acting as if doing
so is appropriate or not damaging to democracy. That’s especially true
for American Jews, who should be prioritizing the battle against
antisemites over partisan grudges and smears.
The married hosts of the MSNBC
“Morning Joe” program came under heavy fire from fellow liberals for a
meeting that the couple pompously spoke of as if it were a major
international diplomatic mission. In their defense, Brzezinski said the
question to ask was “Why wouldn’t we” wish to restart communication with
the president? Yet as comedian Jon Stewart, a leading liberal voice,
satirically noted, the answer to that question was fairly obvious: “Uh, because you said he was Hitler.”
Smearing Trump and lying about Biden
The couple has done as much as anyone at
the hard-core, left-wing cable-news network or anywhere else to demonize
Trump over the last eight years. That included promoting smears
alleging that he was an authoritarian and a fascist, as well as making
specious and slanderous comparisons between his rallies, such as the one
held in October in New York City’s Madison Square Garden, and events held by Nazis.
That ought not to be forgotten. The same is true of their mendacious claims,
which they based on their closeness to the incumbent, that a visibly
aging and confused President Joe Biden was not mentally incapacitated.
They only backed away from that lie once Biden’s problems became obvious
in his disastrous June 27 debate with Trump.
Similar to some other Democrats in the
weeks since Trump’s victory, Mika and Joe have come to realize that
their incendiary rhetoric leaves them in a precarious position. Like
many others who wanted Vice President Kamala Harris to win, they were
willing to say just about anything about Trump, including bogus claims
that he was a threat to democracy at a time when it was his opponents
who were undermining it by promoting censorship of political speech and
trying to jail their leading opponent to justify his defeat.
Now that he’s won, they are putting the
talk about fascism and Hitler on hold. That demonstrates that this line
of argument was never sincere. They are being widely lambasted by those
on the right, who have called out their hypocrisy, as well as their
preposterous claim that they aren’t seeking to “normalize” a person who
had just won a presidential election.
As absurd as they might be—it’s good
television optics, after all—the stars of what many still consider to be
the leading political talk show on cable are right.
The argument for Trump being a threat to
democracy was always a product of quotes taken out-of-context,
deliberate lies (such as the false claim
that he called neo-Nazis who attended the “Unite the Right” rally in
Charlottesville, Va., in August 2017 “very fine people”), myths about
Russian collusion, and a disingenuous attempt to confuse his politically
incorrect and highly unpresidential manner of speaking and posting on
social media with support for racism and tyranny.
Having gone out on a limb to make these
points, people like Mika and Joe—and the countless others who took the
same line—haven’t left themselves many options as Trump’s second term
begins. They can double down on their wild attacks on Trump and their
fellow Americans who have voted for him while claiming that the only
reason their side lost was the manifest awfulness of the country they
profess to love, as some on the left have done. Or they can behave the
way that political factions are supposed to when they lose an election
by acting as a loyal opposition and biding their time until they can win
the next election.
A destructive ‘resistance’
That’s not the path that was chosen by
Trump’s opponents in 2017 as they sought to “resist” the new president
as opposed to merely oppose him. In doing so, they strained the fabric
of American democracy to the breaking point, spreading conspiracy
theories about Russia electing a stooge to the White House and justified
efforts to censor news that might damage Trump’s opponents. That helped
beat Trump in 2020 as the nation floundered amid his administration’s
confused response to the COVID-19 pandemic. It also set the stage for a
period during which Democrats have come to believe that any tactic, no
matter how anti-democratic, is permissible if it hurts Trump.
Even after his victory earlier this month,
they can continue along those lines by treating his justified efforts
to strip the administrative state—an unelected fourth branch of
government that is both a partisan stronghold for Democrats and the
authors of a growing body of law in recent decades—of its power as
evidence of his fascism.
Trump’s astounding political comeback,
however, has appeared to put a damper on the enthusiasm of his
detractors for more trips down the conspiratorial rabbit holes in which
they have dragged so much of the country’s political discourse. They may
still despise the “bad orange man,” but the idea that they can go on
pretending that he is not a legitimate president is no longer viable.
They’d do far better to drop the
“resistance” tactics. By contrast, engaging in normal political tactics
in which they criticized Trump’s missteps rather than pretending that he
is another Hitler will do more to enhance their prospects of winning
back power in Washington. Doing so will also help to calm the waters
that both sides have helped to stir up and restore some confidence in
the government as well as legacy mainstream media whose credibility was
undermined by their vicious attitude towards Trump, and willingness to
ignore Biden’s misrule and mental incapacity.
Fight antisemitism, not Trump
All this should give those liberal Jewish
groups who are now preparing to join the new resistance to Trump 2.0 a
reason to reassess their position.
Both the supposedly mainstream Jewish
Council for Public Affairs and the left-wing lobby J Street that support
efforts to halt the supply of U.S. weapons to Israel to allow Hamas to
survive, as well as a host of other even more marginal groups, seem
prepared to join those bitter-end Trump-haters. They seek to duplicate
efforts to obstruct and topple the president’s first administration and
are uninterested in playing the role of loyal opposition. And it’s more
than likely that many of those liberal Jewish groups who prioritize a
domestic “social justice” agenda will join those who may wish to try to
sabotage Trump’s efforts to protect the U.S. border against illegal
immigration and deport many of those who have violated the law.
That would not only be irresponsible but
would do little to take the country back to a place where political
disputes are not treated as a religious holy war in which compromise or
mercy for opponents is considered beyond the pale. It will be bad for
democracy and likely won’t hasten the Democrats’ return to power.
Just as important, they are ignoring the
fact that the real peril to American Jews is not from Trump. Love him or
hate him, efforts to tie him to antisemitism or to claim that he is a
fascist are false. They are a distraction from the ongoing threat to
American Jewry coming from an increasingly aggressive leftist wing of
the Democrats that has used the post-Oct. 7 war to advance blood libels
against Israel and Jews as “white” oppressors and guilty of genocide.
By doubling down on lies about Trump and
his voters (a group that includes the not insignificant number of Jews
who voted for him in states like New York and Florida in greater numbers
than before because, among other reasons, of his sterling record as a
friend of Israel) as fascists and allies of Nazis, liberal Jewish groups
will be undermining attempts to do something about an unprecedented
surge of antisemitism in this country and beyond.
The reality of the post-Oct. 7 era is that
American Jews need to stop prioritizing partisan politics over their
obligation to fight back against the scourge of Jew-hatred on the left
as well as on the far-right.
It’s long past time for the Jewish members
of the anti-Trump resistance to stop playing politics and start
fighting the real bad guys, including those they might otherwise
consider their political allies. Much like Joe and Mika, they have to
tone down the rhetoric about Trump and realize that their hard feelings
about the election are not as important as responding to the hundreds,
if not thousands, of Charlottesville-type anti-Israel and anti-Jewish
demonstrations carried out by left-wingers demonizing an entire country
and its population over the past year. Those who think that sabotaging
Trump is more important than fighting left-wing Jew-haters will only
give undeserved assistance to those who seek Israel’s destruction and
the silencing of American Jewry.
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