The same people are jumping on the news
that the administration is, in a first for the United States,
negotiating directly with Hamas as part of the talks about a second
phase for the ceasefire/hostage release deal. They say this is a reason
to believe that Trump will stab Israel in the back.
The notion that Trump—by any reasonable
measure the most pro-Israel president since the founding of the modern
Jewish state—hasn’t earned more trust than that rings hollow. But in a
bifurcated political culture in which politics plays the role that
religion once played in most people’s lives, expecting Democrats to give
Republicans, especially those who work with Trump, the benefit of the
doubt, is probably too much to ask.
That they would say it the same week when he was once again demonstrating the sort of moral clarity on Hamas in a social-media post
in which he threatened them and demanded the release of all the
remaining Israeli hostages is not just partisan spin. It’s also absurd.
The Tucker Carlson factor
Trump has himself been guilty
of associating with people that the Jewish community rightly views as
beyond the pale. But when judging a president, it’s policy that matters.
On that score, the president has been exemplary when it comes to
Israel. And he has been just as good when it comes to fighting
antisemitism, especially on U.S. college campuses.
Tucker Carlson,
who remains in the president’s inner circle, is clearly hostile to Israel and guilty of antisemitism.
To note that is not to deny that there is a
small faction of the GOP that , at
best, soft on antisemitism, and at worst, guilty of it. The most
prominent example is former Fox News host Tucker Carlson,
who remains in the president’s inner circle. Carlson seems to have no
more impact on Mideast policy or on combating antisemitism at home in
Trump 2.0 than in his first administration. Still, even if he is no more
than a friend and/or unofficial court jester at Mar-a-Lago, his
continued presence alongside the president and his family at events
remains troubling.
All administrations and political parties
are inevitably coalitions that are bound to include some people who have
strayed into the mainstream from the political fever swamps of the far
right or far left. That even in an administration headed by pro-Israel
figures like Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense
Pete Hegseth and Mike Huckabee (the former Arkansas governor who has
been tapped as the next ambassador to Israel) people like DeMino or
Wilson have gotten jobs is deeply regrettable. But it also testifies to
the fact that when it comes to filling the approximately 4,000 political
appointments in the federal government, there are always going to be a
few people with friends or patrons in high places who don’t share the
views of those in charge on some issues or cause embarrassment in other
ways.
Trump’s team and Hegseth deserve the
criticism they’ve gotten for Wilson. But to claim, as some on the left
are doing, that her crazy views about Israel or Leo Frank are reason to
label the entire administration as unworthy of support is a bridge too
far.
Democrats turn on Israel
More importantly, it is a diversion from
the reality of American politics when it comes to attitudes toward
Israel and the way that antisemitism has been mainstreamed since Oct. 7,
2023, because of hostility to the Jewish state. The two parties’
opinions about the Jewish state are now so diametrically opposed that
any remaining hope about support for it being a matter of bipartisanship
is a boat that sailed a long time ago.
Nor is it a matter of “whataboutism” to
note the contrast between Trump’s policies and appointments, and those
of the Biden-Harris administration.
Though some on the left are making a meal
out of Wilson, they seemed to have no trouble with the fact that Biden
had plenty of anti-Israel and even antisemitic appointees. One prominent
example was Robert Malley, a longtime apologist for the Palestinians
and a bitter critic of Israel who was Biden’s special envoy for Iran
until he was forced out due to losing his security clearance. Another
was Maher Bitar, who was Biden’s senior director for Intelligence on the
National Security Council before being promoted to deputy assistant to
the president, and coordinator for intelligence and defense policy.
Bitar had previously been a leader of the antisemitic Students for
Justice in Palestine and a veteran of UNRWA, the pro-Hamas agency that
has helped perpetuate the conflict. Since January, he’s been working for
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who is Jewish.
With people like Malley and Bitar advising
them, it’s no surprise that President Joe Biden and Vice President
Kamala Harris spent the 15 months after Oct. 7 talking out of both sides
of their mouths when it came to the war on Israel, even praising pro-Hamas students and saying that they should be heard.
Just as indicative of the difference
between the last administration and the present one was the fact that
even Biden’s equivocal attitude toward Israel’s fight for survival
against Hamas was too much for many who served him throughout the
government. Throughout its last year and a half, there was a civil war
going on in the Biden-Harris administration as its half-hearted backing
for Israel was protested by hundreds of staffers who signed petitions
against it and others who resigned in protest. The same was true for Democratic congressional staffers who were, in contrast to many of their bosses, overwhelmingly anti-Israel.
That was indicative of the sea change in
American politics with respect to Israel that has been going on. It has
long been apparent that the left wing of the Democratic Party has been
influenced by woke ideology and the toxic myths of critical race theory,
intersectionality and settler-colonialism teachings, and thus,
increasingly anti-Zionist and antisemitic. But a tipping point has been
reached since Oct. 7.
That was made clear in the most recent Gallup poll
of attitudes toward Israel broken down by party affiliation. In the
recent past, there had been a growing split among Democrats on the
issue. In the last two years, however, that has shifted into a stance in
which the party’s members are now clearly against the Jewish state. The
survey published last month showed that Democrats favored the
Palestinians over Israel by a stunning 59% to 21% margin. By contrast,
Republicans side with Israel by an even larger 75% to 10% margin with
independents backing the Jewish state over the Palestinians by 42% to
34%.
So, it’s hardly surprising that Democratic
officeholders are hostile to Israel or that they have opposed Trump’s
efforts to crack down on colleges and universities that have enabled or
appeased pro-Hamas mobs that targeted Jewish students. Even Senate
Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who has always disingenuously
claimed to be an ardent supporter of Israel and antisemitism, refused to
allow a vote in the Senate last fall on the Antisemitism Awareness Act that codified the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s (IHRA) working definition of the term into federal law for fear of offending a major constituency of his party.
A state of denial
It’s a shame that Israel has become a
partisan issue. The blame for that belongs to the Democrats, who have
shifted to the left on that issue as they have on so many others in
recent decades while the GOP, which a half-century ago was divided on
the Jewish state, has now become almost a lockstep pro-Israel party.
That doesn’t excuse the hiring of Wilson
and DeMino, or the way people like Carlson remain relevant on the right.
Yet it’s long past time for Jewish Democrats to stop pretending that
support for Israel is mainstream in their party, or that Trump and the
GOP—whatever you might otherwise think about them—aren’t stalwart
supporters of the Jewish state and the American Jewish community.
Antisemitism still exists on the right, but the primary threat to Jews
in the United States now comes from woke activists, academics and
officeholders who have made opposition to Israel and the toleration of
Jew-hatred the new orthodoxy on the left. To claim otherwise is not just
hypocritical for those who were silent about what happened under Biden.
It’s to be in a state of denial that is as tragic as it is wrongheaded.
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