Like many prominent political figures, Donald Trump recognized the anniversary of Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attack on Israel. What was notable, however, was the Trumpian way in which he marked the day. The New York Times reported:
Former President Donald J. Trump on Monday blamed Democrats for antisemitism at an event commemorating the Oct. 7 Hamas terrorist attack on Israel, then claimed there was no antisemitism in the ranks of the Republican Party, even as his own endorsed candidate for governor in North Carolina is at the center of a scandal involving antisemitic remarks.
“The anti-Jewish hatred has returned even here in America, in our streets, our media and our college campuses and within the ranks of the Democrat [sic] Party in particular, not in the Republican Party, I will tell you,” the former president said at the event, held at one of his resorts.
Trump added, “The Republican Party has not been infected by this horrible disease. And hopefully it won’t be. It won’t be as long as I’m in charge, I can tell you that.”
Trump: And I say that the Republican party has not been infected by this horrible disease, and hopefully it won't be. It won’t be as long I’m in charge pic.twitter.com/E753XqqgC1
— Acyn (@Acyn) October 8, 2024
The rhetoric was obviously ugly and false, but it was also poorly timed.
As Trump pretends that the GOP doesn’t have an antisemitism problem, Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia continued to insist, over and over again, that “they” have a secret ability to “control the weather” — and as my MSNBC colleague Ja’han Jones explained, “Greene didn’t specify whether ‘they’ are Jewish in this weather control scenario, but such claims about people nefariously controlling the weather have documented links to antisemitic conspiracy theories.”
A few days earlier, Republican Rep. Tim Burchett of Tennessee thought it’d be a good idea to condemn George Soros as a “money changer of the worst kind.”
Trump’s remarks came against a backdrop in which the public learned that North Carolina’s Republican gubernatorial candidate, Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson, allegedly described himself as a “Nazi” and praised Adolf Hitler’s “Mein Kampf.”
Let’s not forget far-right media personality Tucker Carlson, who received a prominent speaking slot at the Republican National Convention, who recently interviewed and praised a Holocaust revisionist, and who nevertheless remains close with the party’s presidential ticket.
And then there’s Trump himself, who, just a few weeks ago, publicly suggested that he intends to blame Jews, at least in part, if he loses the 2024 race. A month earlier, after seeing Gov. Josh Shapiro’s remarks at the Democratic National Convention, the former president decided to take a rhetorical shot at his critic. The Pennsylvania Democrat, the former president wrote online, is a “highly overrated Jewish Governor.”
In context, there was no reason for the Republican to reference Shapiro’s faith. Trump did it anyway.
It was not an isolated incident. As regular readers might recall, it was earlier this year when Trump also invoked a familiar dual loyalty trope by claiming that Jewish voters who support Democrats hate Israel.








