New polling out of the University of Maryland suggests young Republicans aren’t buying Donald Trump and his administration’s spin that recent protests on college campuses over Israel’s bombardment of Gaza are motivated by antisemitism.
According to the data, more Americans believe the protests are driven by anger with Israel than antisemitism — a distinction the president and his administration have tried to blur, in defiance of the many Jewish activists who’ve bristled at attempts to conflate the two.
As Lawfare Media explained, some of the most eyebrow-raising findings expose the stark difference between how the younger (18- to 34-year-olds) and the older (35 and older) Republicans who were surveyed view the protests:
The most striking difference is between younger and older Republicans: Whereas 53 percent of older Republicans say protests are more reflective of antisemitic attitudes, only 25 percent of younger Republicans say the same; and whereas 18 percent of older Republicans say protests are more reflective of anger with Israeli actions, 31 percent of younger Republicans say the same.
This tracks with data from the past half-decade that show young Republicans hold a far less favorable view of Israel’s government than older Republicans do. (That said, Republicans of either category were more likely to attribute the protests to antisemitism than either Democrats or independents of any age.)








