Sunday, March 09, 2025

TRUMP HAS BEEN THE MOST PRO-ISRAEL PRESIDENT SINCE THE FOUNDING OF THE MODERN JEWISH STATE IN 1948

Trust Trump on Israel? Hypocritical Biden-Harris supporters say ‘no’

While a DOD spokeswoman’s antisemitic tweets may have caused outrage, some questionable political appointments don’t substantiate claims that Trump is anti-Jewish. 

 

By Jonathan S. Tobin

 

JNS

Mar 7, 2025

 

A sign congratulating U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on his victory in the election, in central Jerusalem, Nov. 7, 2024. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
A sign congratulating U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on his victory in the election, in central Jerusalem, Nov. 7, 2024.
 

Kingsley Wilson should never have gotten a job in the Trump administration. The heretofore obscure conservative activist provided plenty of fodder for President Donald Trump’s critics this week when it was discovered that she has a history of antisemitic social-media posts.

A deep dive into the X account of the woman who serves as deputy press secretary in the U.S. Department of Defense provoked outrage this week from groups like the American Jewish Committee, in addition to liberal media outlets and many Democrats. Even some Republicans chimed in to note that the administration’s vetting process clearly failed in this case. In the past, she worked for the Trump campaign in 2020 and since then ran digital media and communications with the Center for Renewing America, a conservative think tank, whose founder was Russel Vought, Trump’s influential director of the Office of Management and Budget. Apparently, no one in the Trump world had the good sense to realize that her record as an Internet troll was not only inappropriate but would also be held against the new administration.

 

<p>Deputy Department of Defense press secretary Kingsley Wilson has a ‘long history’ of bigoted social media posts, according to a report</p>

 

Angry about Wilson’s appointment is entirely justified. Her post on X, in which she took the side of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1915 lynching of a Leo Frank—an Atlanta Jew who was framed for rape and murder—is evidence of staggering ignorance and anti-Jewish sentiment. That she said this in August 2024 and not sometime in the distant past when she was in high school or college makes it even worse. The fact that she wasn’t even forced to apologize is shocking. It also shows how many in the Trump administration, like the president himself, seem to believe that holding themselves accountable for even the most obvious mistakes is a sign of unforgivable weakness in the face of a hostile media.

Partisan spin

For the anti-Trump resistance, particularly those in the Jewish community, it was being treated as more than just a case of a bad apple amid a plethora of administration appointees at the highest levels who are both friends of the Jewish community and ardent supporters of Israel. It was, along with other exceptions to Trump’s pro-Israel rule—like Michael DiMino, the chief Middle East policy advisor at the Pentagon who has a history of hostility to Israel—treated by some as evidence that Trump can’t be trusted to stand against antisemitism or not to betray the Jewish state at some point in his second term.

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