| Thomas Massie and Ed Gallrein |
While it is, of course, true that lobbyists who support
Israel will naturally support candidates with favorable attitudes toward
Israel, that does not mean those candidates were bought by an Israel supporting
lobby — any more than politicians are “owned” by any other lobby in Washington.
The right to petition our government is a constitutional
right. The notion promoted by some politicians that AIPAC is somehow doing
something unethical - is not only pure nonsense, but often an indication of
underlying — if not overt — antisemitism.
This describes the lame-duck congressman from Kentucky,
Thomas Massie, who just lost the Republican primary for reelection to an eighth
term. His primary opponent, former Navy SEAL Ed Gallrein, defeated Massie by 10
points.
Massie’s thinly disguised antisemitism is similar to that of
Tucker Carlson. Whose rhetoric about Israel’s “control” of Congress mimics that
of fringe antisemites on the far right. He may as well have used the term ZOG
to describe Congress.
Nor is he the first Republican member of Congress to say
similar things about his colleagues. One may recall former Nebraska Senator
Chuck Hagel — later Secretary of Defense under Barack Obama — saying something
along the lines of, “Some members of Congress forget which country they
represent.” That was in reference to the overwhelming financial support for
Israel within his party.
Thankfully people like this are not mainstream. They are
mavericks who delight in the publicity they get from their controversial views.
And now this latest ‘maverick’ will soon be gone
Massie’s defeat is good news for Israel. One less antisemite
will be replaced by a pro-Israel supporter who was hand-picked and endorsed by
the president.
The media points to the president as being responsible for
Massie’s loss. As was the case with virtually all of the candidates Trump has
endorsed in primaries across the country. The Republican Party has increasingly
become the party of Trump. If you support him, he endorses you and you are
likely to win among Republican voters. If you oppose him on almost any issue,
you are politically finished. Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, a two-term
veteran of the Senate, found that out the hard way, losing to his opponents,
the relatively unknown Julia Letlow and John Fleming, who advanced to a runoff.
Although it is now a hard political reality for Republicans that they are either “with him or against him,” and that this determines whether they can run successfully as Republicans, I think there was more at play in Massie’s case...
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