‘The Stefanik Doctrine’: A stronger stand against antisemitism
One would be greatly mistaken to think that she will pause in her efforts to combat Jew-haters and anti-Israel terrorists.
By Moshe Phillips
JNS
Apr 8, 2025

The announcement by President Donald Trump in late March that Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.) would not be the next ambassador to the United Nations was disappointing to many Israel supporters. Since the Hamas-led terrorist attacks in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the congresswoman has emerged as a leader in the U.S. House of Representatives, both in the fight against antisemitism and in support of Israel, perhaps becoming the most visible leader in those battles.
What’s more, she vowed to continue those efforts at the world body when she appeared before the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations in January. Her criticism of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) was not only necessary but a breath of fresh air.
But one would be greatly mistaken to think that she will pause in her efforts to combat Jew-haters and anti-Israel terrorists.
Her return to the House could see more steps in the growing outline of what might be called “The Stefanik Doctrine.”
It contrasts sharply with the policy
approach of the Biden-Harris team, which left even their own supporters
in the liberal camp—and many others—outraged by what could be described
as their propensity for inaction against anti-Israel extremists on
campuses and beyond. It was an inaction that suggested to Hamas
supporters that they would face little federal opposition, no matter how
outrageous and illegal their activities became.
Deborah Lipstadt,
the longtime historian and Emory University professor who served as the
only U.S. special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemitism
during the Biden presidency, was quoted in The New York Times on March
4, saying: “ … there were too many moments that were met with silence.”
That is an understatement.
What’s
worse is that now that the Trump administration has changed course in
that it is removing anti-Israel extremists from the country, groups like
J Street and Jewish Voice for Peace are attacking these actions. A J
Street press release issued on March 10 stated: “The Trump
Administration’s arrest, detention, and threat of deportation of
Columbia protest leader and permanent legal resident Mahmoud Khalil, in
violation of existing law and without due process, is an affront to the
constitutional right to free speech … .”
For many American Jews,
these arguments are eerily reminiscent of the rhetoric used by the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) during one of the darkest periods
in American Jewish history: when neo-Nazis threatened to march on
Skokie, Ill., a community that was home to an extremely large number of
Holocaust survivors.
But what a difference 48 years makes: Rahm
Emanuel, former mayor of Chicago, former House representative from
Illinois, and most recently, the U.S. ambassador to Japan, opposed the
haters in his state in the 1970s. As Emanuel explained in a 2017
interview in The Times of Israel, “You’re talking to a person who
started his own political awareness opposing neo-Nazis in Skokie and
then in Marquette Park in Chicago when I was 16 or 17 years old.”
It’s
no longer liberals like Emanuel leading the charge to protect Jews from
Jew-haters; now, it’s Stefanik and others on the other side of the
aisle.
What’s changed?
On one hand, groups like J Street and the Jewish Voice for Peace did not exist when neo-Nazis pushed to march in Skokie.
Another
thing is that many clear-thinking Americans of all faiths see that
Hamas is really no different than Al-Qaeda or the Nazis.
A year
ago, Stefanik stated in reference to campus antisemitism at Columbia
University on New York’s Upper West Side: “Fueled by hatred and
ignorance, unchecked antisemitism has become commonplace on Columbia’s
campus: Nazi-era antisemitic propaganda litters the grounds, Swastikas
graffiti school property, and mobs assaulting Jewish students,
professors openly supporting Hamas and calling for genocide of the
Jewish people. Meanwhile, despite claims otherwise, Columbia’s
leadership refuses to enforce their own policies and condemn Jewish
hatred on campus, creating a breeding ground for antisemitism and a
hotbed of support for terrorism from radicalized faculty and students.”
Views
towards the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria (referred to as the
West Bank Settlements) are still another way that Stefanik (and her
doctrine) stands in stark opposition to the views of J Street and the
Jewish Voice for Peace.
At those same hearings, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), who has been a recipient of financial support from JStreetPac, questioned Stefanik’s support for Israel’s rights to Judea and Samaria.
Stefanik stood firm in her response to his challenge, affirming her
belief that, after being questioned by Van Hollen, Israel has a biblical
right to the entire West Bank. She responded quickly and simply with a
definitive: “Yes.”
JStreetPac has boasted on its website that “Senator (Van Hollen) is one of J Street’s closest allies in Congress.”
Thank goodness that the would-be shepherds of the Jewish community, like J Street, do not go unopposed.
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