Convention speakers included college students who defended the U.S. flag from pro-Palestinian protesters and the parents of an American still being held by Hamas.
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Israel and antisemitism were given prominence at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday.
Hamas’s brutal massacre in Israel and Israel’s retaliatory war in Gaza crashed into the Republican National Convention in prime time Wednesday night, as former President Donald J. Trump’s Republican Party moved to make Israel’s fight its own — and to further fracture the Democratic Party’s longstanding bond with American Jews.
A coterie of fresh-faced fraternity brothers from the University of North Carolina was invited onstage to be celebrated for defending the American flag from pro-Palestinian protesters who had tried to take it down. An Orthodox Jewish student from Harvard, Shabbos Kestenbaum, castigated the Democratic Party he once supported as “ideologically poisoned” by “far-left antisemitic extremism.”
And Orna and Ronen Neutra, the parents of an American citizen still held by Hamas in Gaza, led the crowd in a chant of “bring them home,” after recounting how Mr. Trump had called them after their son was taken hostage.
ImageRonen and Orna Neutra, the parents of Omer Neutra, an American citizen still being held hostage by Hamas in Gaza, speaking at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee on Wednesday.Credit…Kenny Holston/The New York Times
Then Lee Zeldin, once one of two Jewish Republicans in the House before running unsuccessfully to be New York’s governor, accused President Biden of pandering to antisemitic protesters.
It was a tricky two-step for a party whose nominee dined in 2022 with an outright and outspoken antisemite, Nick Fuentes, and for a convention that had also featured Mark Robinson, the lieutenant governor of North Carolina, who has spouted Holocaust denial, and Charlie Kirk, the youthful conservative leader who stirred controversy last fall by defending Elon Musk’s endorsement of an antisemitic conspiracy theory.
But it underscored how the brutal war in Gaza has badly strained a Democratic Party that is struggling to balance its long ties with American Jewry and its support from American Muslims.
The Republicans let it be known no such strains were afflicting their position. They were standing with Israel, regardless.
Jonathan Weisman is a politics writer, covering campaigns with an emphasis on economic and labor policy. He is based in Chicago. More about Jonathan Weisman
See more on: 2024 Elections, Republican Party, Republican Party, Donald Trump, President Joe Biden, Israel-Hamas War News
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Source: nytimes.com