In theory, this sounds great. A united Jewish voice in
Congress could have a positive influence on how Congress deals with the rise in
antisemitism. If that were their sole purpose, I would support them. Although non-Jewish
Republicans have done a far better job of this lately than Jewish Democrats, it
can’t hurt to have the Jewish voices in congress join them.
But the potential for distorting Judaism into some sort of
religious version of progressive values makes them a liability rather than an
asset. It should not be lost on anyone that the entire caucus will be made up
of liberal Jewish Democrats whose values are more liberal than they are
Jewish. The three Jewish Republicans in the House will not be part of this
caucus.
The fact that only liberal Democrats are involved leads me
to suspect that what they consider to be in the Jewish interest is not
necessarily in the Jewish interest to me - or to any other Orthodox Jew. Recent
history has shown that many Jewish House members seemed to care more about
Palestinian casualties during Israel’s war with Hamas than they did about
Jewish soldiers who were killed or grievously injured protecting the Jewish
people of Israel. The fact that the Prime Minister of Israel has been boycotted
more than once by some Jewish Democrats does not give me confidence that Jewish interests would be at
the heart of this caucus.
More importantly, however, in order for something to be
considered Jewish, one has to define what makes it Jewish aside from the fact
that it will be fighting antisemitism. Unsurprisingly, Representative Debbie
Wasserman Schultz (one of the caucus’s founders) provided an answer to that:
Wasserman Schultz said that the caucus will seek to promote other Jewish community values like education and tikkun olam, which could bring it into broader fights over the Trump administration’s efforts to cut federal spending.
To define the mission of the caucus in terms of education and tikkun olam is exactly what’s wrong with calling this caucus Jewish. A Jewish caucus ought to be promoting more than just one or two valu, which in any case aren’t exclusively Jewish. In fact, the opposite will probably be true. The caucus will likely be promoting progressive values and calling them Jewish, a total distortion of what Jewish values truly consist of.
None of the
Jewish members of Congress are Orthodox. Some of whom wouldn’t recognize a Jewish value
if it hit them in the face. For example, Jewish progressives believe that normalizing
behavior the Torah considers an abomination is a Jewish value.
It should therefore not come as a surprise that all the members of this Jewish caucus are liberal Democrats. The three Jewish Republican House members will not be a part of it. Although Rep. Wasserman Schultz denies it, I agree with...
Rep. Max Miller (R-OH), who had expressed interest in joining the caucus, attended one of its earlier meetings, but “for some reason has declared this to be the Democratic Jewish Caucus…
As far as I am concerned, this caucus may do more harm to
the Jewish people than good. They will be fighting the same fight that
heterodoxy fights. For example, I doubt they would support a federal voucher
program for all states that would provide much-needed relief to tuition-paying parochial school parents. They would surely side with the leftist teachers’ unions who want that
money for themselves, using the First Amendment as their fig-leaf objection.
Bottom line, sure. A unified Jewish voice in Congress is a good thing. And it may be helpful in fighting antisemitism. But with respect to other Jewish issues, the fact that it consists only of liberal Jewish Democrats makes me wonder if the cure is worse than the disease.