Jew-hating antisemites have hurt the Democrats, politically, and they will hurt the Republicans, politically, as well if they are allowed into elite conservative circles.
If you want to find a Jew-hating antisemite on the left, go to an Ivy League college campus. If you want to find a Jew-hating antisemite on the right, go the dark web.
This has been true for at least the past decade, and it speaks to the relative influence of Jew-hating antisemites within the Democratic Party and the relative lack of influence of Jew-hating antisemites within the Republican Party.
Simply put, right-wing Jew-hating antisemites have little or no influence within the Republican Party. Left-wing Jew-hating antisemites, by contrast, have a lot of clout and influence within the Democratic Party.
That is why today, significantly more Republicans than Democrats support Israel. Indeed, “Democrats,” reports Pew Research, “are much more likely to express unfavorable opinions of Israel than Republicans (69% vs. 37%).”
Kevin Roberts and Tucker Carlson. Unfortunately, thanks to right-wing influencer Tucker Carlson and Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts, that may be changing. Jew-hating antisemites may be gaining a foothold on the elite right and within the Republican Party.
That’s the upshot and the danger of the brouhaha over Carlson’s friendly interview of Nick Fuentes, a self-avowed pro-Nazi fan of Adolph Hitler, and Roberts’ subsequent defense of Carlson’s friendly interview of Fuentes.
As we’ve reported, Jew hatred within the Democratic Party kept Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro from being selected as the party’s 2024 vice presidential nominee.
The question now is whether Jew hatred within the Republican Party will sink the GOP’s prospects in 2028: by forcing the party to accommodate right-wing Jew-hating antisemites, who are anathema to the overwhelming majority of voters.
The question, sadly, is not academic or theoretical; it is all too real. Pew Research reports that young Republican voters (under age 50) have grown increasingly hostile to Israel. Indeed, within this age cohort, negative views of the Jewish state have jumped from 35 percent three years ago to 50 percent today.
“Conservatives in Washington, D.C.,” reports Rod Dreher,
have been saying to me that the influence of neo-Nazi Holocaust-denying livestreamer Nick Fuentes has taken off among Gen Z congressional and administration staffers.
One older insider put the number of Fuentes fans and fellow travelers, so-called Groypers, in these Washington circles at “30 to 40 percent.”
[…]
I ran the “30 to 40 percent” claim past the conservative Zoomers I spoke to in D.C.; every one of them affirmed it.
Politics and Morality. This is alarming. Allowing Jew hatred to fester within the elite, mainstream right would, of course, be a moral abomination. It also would be politically catastrophic for conservatives and the Republican Party.
Simply put, there is no political constituency in conservative America for rank bigotry and Jew hatred. Espousing or countenancing bigotry and Jew hatred also will repel most voters, left, right and center.
In this respect, Republicans have a distinct political advantage over Democrats. As we noted last fall:
The hard and difficult truth is that Jew-hating anti-Semites are now an important constituency and activist base within the Democratic Party. Democrats are wary of alienating this constituency because they need its votes and its political activism during the election season.
For this reason, the Dems ruled out Josh Shapiro as their 2024 vice presidential nominee. As a pro-Israeli Jew, Shapiro never had a chance.
Pro-Israeli Jews are welcome in the Republican Party; but given demographic trends, and given elite conservative indulgence of Jew-hating antisemites on the right—i.e., Roberts’ indulgence of Carlson—for how long will this be true?
Gatekeeping. To be clear, there is no reason to believe that Roberts is a Jew-hating antisemite; quite the opposite. He is, by all accounts a good, tolerant and fair-minded family man.
However, the upshot of Roberts’ defense of Carlson is that he is giving Jew-hating antisemites a place on the elite, mainstream right, and that cannot be tolerated—at least not if Republicans want to command the moral high ground, win elections, and effect a governing majority.
The bottom line: Jew-hating antisemites are an integral part of the elite, mainstream left. They mustn’t become an integral part of the elite, mainstream right.
Feature photo credit: Right-wing influencer Tucker Carlson (L) and Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts (R), courtesy of ABC News and The New Republic (David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images), respectively.




