A Shove Disguised As a Hug
It was back in early January 2019, just days after the swearing-in of the 116th Congress, that the concept of 鈥渄ual loyalty鈥 made another appearance in American politics. At question was a tweet by freshman Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.) criticizing a vote to condemn the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement. Tlaib wrote of the bill鈥檚 advocates.
In March, Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.) came under fire for similar comments. When referencing, in a meeting with supporters, what she viewed as undue influence by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, a powerful pro-Israel lobbying group, Omar declared,
Politicians across the political spectrum condemned the remarks, not least among them President Trump, who has returned to them often, going after both representatives in But here is where the story pivots. While it would seem an embrace of American Jews, this President would eventually utilize the same trope to exclude Jews. While in this light it might seem ironic, 国产视频 vision of the country, built on exclusion, actually makes antisemitism a necessary inclusion in his attempts to narrow the definition of what it means to be fully American.
Let鈥檚 back up to be sure we understand the ramifications of what might, at first, seem to be just cable news bric-a-brac. Charges of disloyalty, or dual loyalty, have a serious history that has effected real consequences. In , the trope鈥攔elying on the idea that Jews, rather than being entirely invested in their country of residence, hold a simultaneous allegiance 鈥渢o their coreligionists around the world or to a secret and immoral Jewish agenda鈥濃攈as 鈥渂een used to harass, marginalize, and persecute the Jewish people for centuries.鈥
And with this in mind, it is not difficult to see why the President鈥檚 recent comments caused such an uproar. Speaking in an Oval Office press conference about Democratic support for Tlaib and Omar鈥斺攈e remarked, And though the object of such 鈥渄isloyalty鈥 was at first vague, Trump clarified the next day: Democratic Jews are, in his mind,
This clarification was, a vindicating defense. As Yair Rosenberg pointed out in The Washington Post, that Trump casts allegiance to Israel as a positive attribute, rather than a negative, is indeed But this certainly does not make it any less harmful; the underlying premise remains that Jewish Americans are鈥攖o be blunt鈥攕trangers in a foreign land. Trump insinuates that Jews are somehow Israeli, even if they, in point of fact, are not.
The messy truth is that antisemitism remains a pervasive element of society that is not constrained to a particular political ideology. To recognize that and, in the words of ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, is a necessary step in improving life for Jews in America. Yet to leave it there, claiming both sides are equally to blame, is myopic; there is a fundamental difference here.
While Trump claims this simply is not true. It was just last month that Democrats voted against their advocated stance and for a House resolution opposing the BDS movement, the caucus supporting it by a 209-16 margin. Omar and Tlaib are Democratic Congresswomen, certainly, but鈥攚hile they have captured media attention鈥攖hey hold little influence over party-level decisions, and their views are not shared by the Democratic mainstream.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump is the leader of his party, and a trend only intensified by It is a continuation of years of to use the technical term, which now seemingly extends to antisemitism, too.
For Trump, it appears his politics of exclusion is a machine he can鈥檛 effectively turn off. Even in an attempt to appeal to a minority group, he reminded them, and the rest of us, that true belonging is never fully available to them. 鈥攖hough targeted initially at Muslims and Hispanics鈥攈as come to encompass Jews as yet another component of the Other.
The centuries-long history of the Jewish diaspora is one of arrival, a tentative inclusion, and then exclusion鈥攐ften through horrific violence. Yet, even as immigrant Jews faced discrimination鈥斺擜merica seemed to be the exception. That the country鈥檚 ideals valued a civic religion more than race or creed gave hope that, finally, this was a place where Jews could be welcomed, could be at home; it gave hope that exclusion would never come.
With a President who so openly contradicts those ideals, such hope seems in ever increasing doubt.