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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIs Trump Destroying Bipartisan Consensus on Israel?
For a long time, elected officials in Washington maintained a rough consensus on Israel. The United States and Israel were unquestioned allies. Military and aid packages were guaranteed winners in Congress. And support for Israel was bipartisan. Following the Six-Day War in 1967, when the countrys survival seemed imminently threatened, Jewish organizations helped build this American consensus, and helped sustain it: Lawmakers and other political leaders were entitled to their own opinions, but at a basic level, being anything other than pro-Israel was unacceptable.
As the past two weeks of head-spinning news about Israel have demonstrated, some aspects of Washingtons long-standing consensus on the country are changing. Donald Trump has upended normal channels of advocacy, leaving large, traditional institutions constantly scrambling to catch up with his latest tweet or off-the-cuff remark. He constantly amplifies far-right and far-left voices on subjects relating to Israel, fueling a narrative of fracture and polarization. And while Republicans have long worked to portray themselves as the only true friends of Israel, Trump has made this a priority, last week going so far as to say that Jews who vote for Democrats show a total lack of knowledge or great disloyalty, later clarifying that he meant disloyalty to Israel. The past three years have exacerbated existing fissures among American Jews, with activists on the left loudly questioning the old consensus and political leaders on the right going along with Trumps tactics.
Trumps behavior is very dangerous, Abe Foxman, the former longtime head of the Anti-Defamation League, told me. Hes trying to use us: in his efforts, his campaign, whatever his needs are.
The upshot is that Jewish organizations have lost control of the narrative on Israel. Trumps actions and statements about Jews and Israel have little to do with the Jewish peoplethey reflect the mode and priorities of his largely Christian, right-wing base. In practice, Washingtons bipartisan consensus on Israel mostly remains intact, but the story about Israel has changed radically. Jews have become characters in a larger political drama over Israel and anti-Semitism, two of the issues they have historically cared about most. The endless cycles of outrage are not meant to benefit Jews, and theyre not really about Jews.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/is-trump-destroying-bipartisan-consensus-on-israel/ar-AAGjePf?li=BBnbfcL
Yes with help from Netan the yahoo.
Me.
(35,454 posts)the prying apart began when Recons invited Bibi to speak before Congress against our president's deal with Iran. Sadly, it doesn't help the situation now, that then, Schumer stood with the prime minister against his president. I'd like to give the traitor full credit but I think he's taking advantage of a -problem that was in the making.
abqtommy
(14,118 posts)evangelicals and tRUMP knows he has to support this faction of his supporters.