This U.S. election could be uniquely bad for Israel.
Neither Donald Trump nor Kamala Harris is driven by an excess of love for the Jewish state — and antisemitism plagues both of their parties.
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This is a guest essay written by Paul Gross, a Senior Fellow at the Menachem Begin Heritage Center in Jerusalem.
You can also listen to the podcast version of this essay on Apple Podcasts, YouTube Music, YouTube, and Spotify.
For the first time in my lifetime, both candidates in a U.S. presidential election should deeply concern Israelis and American Jews.
Kamala Harris’ actual stated positions on Israel seem pretty standard for the Democratic Party: supports Israeli security; supports a two-state solution; a fan of liberal, “start-up nation” Israel; and not a fan of settling-the-West-Bank Israel.
But as part of a younger generation of Democrats, she lacks the instinctive pro-Israel feeling that Biden or the Clintons have. (I am not sure we will hear her call herself “a Zionist” anytime soon, as Biden has.)
Far more concerning, there is every reason to fear that a President Harris would pander to the “progressive” wing of her party; she has a record of adjusting her positions to fit the political winds, and in the activist base of her party (though not among Democrats more broadly) there is a hurricane of anti-Israel sentiment.
And what of Donald Trump? Will he be good for Israel?
“Of course! The guy who moved the Embassy to Jerusalem and withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal? What’s wrong with you??”
Ok, don’t get upset Trump-supporting friends, but if you think that Donald Trump has some kind of personal affinity with Israel, you have misread the guy. Trump is not driven by ideology. He will follow his instincts at any given time, and weigh up what best feeds his ego and need for status, wealth, and self-aggrandizement. Everything is transactional; “values” (democratic, pro-Israel, or other) are irrelevant.
Now, given the broad pro-Israel consensus in the Republican Party, there is good reason to assume Trump would be generally supportive of Israel, just as he was in his first term. Though Trump’s Middle East policy was by no means all positive: Syria became an Iranian-Russian outpost on his watch, and Islamist Turkey was shamefully appeased with Trump showering praise on President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan — yet another authoritarian he is mysteriously drawn to.
But Trump is entirely capable of shunting Israel aside if he decides there’s something in it for him, or if Israel is an obstacle to some other objective. Maybe Vladimir Putin, who he so openly admires, will request it of him?
If Saudi Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman (another Trump favorite) gets impatient with Israel’s refusal to commit to any movement on the Palestinian issue and asks Trump to strong-arm Benjamin Netanyahu, does anyone think Trump would say no because of some deep-seated personal commitment to Israel?
If you do, I have a bridge to sell you. When the Abraham Accords were threatened by Netanyahu’s promise to settler leaders to annex the West Bank, Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner humiliated Israeli Ambassador Ron Dermer and forced Bibi to renege on his annexation promise (raising the bizarre possibility that Israel’s pro-settlement Right could have the most to fear from a Trump presidency).
But there is a wider problem with Trump if you are concerned about Israel’s security and place in the world. The choice of J. D. Vance as running mate shows Trump doubling down on America First isolationism. Vance is part of an ideological movement that pushes wholesale American abandonment of its post-World War II role as “Leader of the Free World.”
He is by no means anti-Israel, but no serious Israeli security analyst would be anything but horrified at American withdrawal from the Western alliance, and the concomitant strengthening of Russia and China.
The Parties and Antisemitism
The whole question of antisemitism has become disastrously political in the U.S. Both parties are excellent at condemning antisemitism from across the aisle, and equally good at turning a blind eye to the antisemitism on their own side.
Currently the major wave of antisemitism in the U.S. is coming from the Left, so Republicans look like the party that is “taking antisemitism seriously.” If I was an American student on an Ivy League campus, I would be feeling very positively towards the Republican Party after the rousing display of pro-Israelism at the Republican National Convention a couple of weeks ago. When conservatives claim that a similar show of unequivocal support for Israel is unlikely at the Democratic Convention, it is hard to argue.
But, when the major antisemitism story was not about Israel and the Left’s “anti-Zionism,” but about a shooter slaughtering worshippers in a Pittsburgh synagogue because he believed in the Great Replacement theory, or White supremacists in Charlottesville chanting “Jews will not replace us,” the Democrats were the ones who could condemn it without fear of embarrassment or hypocrisy.
Republicans had to hope people did not notice they have members of Congress and cheerleaders in conservative media who traffic in exactly that White Nationalist conspiracy theory.
Pro-Putin propagandist Tucker Carlson has been one of the leading Right-wing proponents of “the Great Replacement.” He was also at that Republican National Convention, palling around with Trump and J. D. Vance. And where were the Republican figures taking Trump to task for hosting Kanye West and the Holocaust denier Nick Fuentes at Mar-a-Lago last year?
With a few exceptions — Congressman Richie Torres comes most readily to mind — very few prominent figures in either party actually oppose antisemitism on both sides of the political divide.
The extremes are winning.
Since 2020, the extremes of both Left and Right have become louder. Parts of the Left, with their obsession with permanent “victim” and “oppressor” classes, have moved into unapologetic antisemitism and support for Hamas. Jews as “White” and successful can never be victims; and because Israel is a “racist, colonial” project, Jews are obviously oppressors unless they disavow Zionism.
Parts of the Right were radicalized by Trump’s defeat in 2020 and his subsequent campaign to overturn that defeat, culminating in the horrendous riot at the Capitol on January 6th, 2021.
Biden has no truck with the far-Left’s take on Israel; Harris, while certainly not an antisemite or Hamas apologist, is far more likely to nod and wink to progressive activists with her statements on the Middle East.
Trump has always been both the promoter of conspiracy theories and the emboldener of conspiracy theorists. Every conspiracy which identifies “enemies” and “evil” which must be fought, sooner or later casts its suspicious eyes on the Jews. QAnon — which Trump has praised despite its clearly insane premise, that the Democrats are running a devil-worshipping pedophile ring — is no different.
Jews are, inevitably, part of the global elite supporting and providing cover for this satanic child abuse. The Rothschilds are even mentioned explicitly by “the Q Shaman,” that most memorable of the Capitol Hill insurrectionists, dressed in horns and furs, carrying a spear as he filmed himself sitting in the chair of the Vice President.
In 2020, you had a moderate Democrat, hostile to the toxic extremes in his party, versus a populist Republican, very much encouraging his own party’s lunatics.
This time, both parties have candidates who (for very different reasons) could cause Israel’s policymakers sleepless nights, and who are unlikely to fully reject those on their side of the aisle threatening the well-being of American Jews.
Biden withheld resupply of 11 weapons systems while assuring us that talk is cheap and appeasing his far left base Trump always stood by Israel
Biden and Obama sent literal pallets of cash to Iran, but I am supposed to worry about Trump because he said something nice about a bad person. Keep burying your head in the sand as the Democrats that lead America's cities and universities let Hamas proponents execute pogroms and desecrate American symbols without any consequences.