Friday, May 22, 2026

The Thomas Massie Lesson

National Review Online

Thursday, May 21, 2026

 

It turns out that trying to appeal to the audience of left-wing podcaster Cenk Uygur is not the way to win a Republican primary.

 

Representative Thomas Massie made a last-minute appearance with Uygur for a friendly interview before losing a bitterly fought reelection battle widely considered a referendum on the future direction of the GOP. While it’s always dangerous to overinterpret the result of a single primary, Massie’s defeat certainly cuts against the idea that there is a large, real-world market for his brand of conspiratorial right-wing populism and isolationism.

 

Obviously, the most important determinant of the race was President Trump’s unremitting opposition. The Kentucky Republican had crossed Trump enough times for the president to make defeating him a priority. On some issues, such as his opposition to tariffs and the One Big Beautiful Bill, Massie’s stances could be defended on principled libertarian grounds regarding free trade and fiscal restraint. But he also became a thorn in the side of Trump by pushing unfounded conspiracy theories revolving around Jeffrey Epstein. He led a push to force the Department of Justice to foolishly release files from its investigation of the deceased child sex offender, which unfairly tarnished people merely mentioned in the files, while revealing nothing to support the representative’s lurid theories. Massie took it further by affirmatively smearing innocent people. This disgraceful escapade alone meant he deserved to lose.

 

Yet the simplest way to view the race is that Massie has joined a long list of Republicans who got on Trump’s bad side over the past decade and no longer have jobs in Republican politics. Put in the context of the recent defeats of Indiana state senators targeted by Trump and Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, who voted for the second Trump impeachment, Massie’s demise is the norm, rather than an exceptional event.

 

On foreign policy, Massie opposed Trump’s war against Iran, and was rabidly and obsessively anti-Israel. He not only opposed aid to Israel, which again, could be explained on libertarian grounds, but regularly accused supporters of Israel of having a nefarious influence on America and of displaying dual loyalty. A few months after the October 7 attacks, Massie posted a meme ridiculing U.S. support for Israel, accusing Congress of turning its back on American patriotism in favor of Zionism. He dismissed colleagues who supported Israel as paid puppets of the pro-Israel lobbying group, AIPAC. When the United Democracy Project, an AIPAC-affiliated group, poured millions into the campaign to defeat him, Massie made opposing AIPAC a centerpiece of his campaign. In defeat, he couldn’t get Israel off his mind, ungraciously saying of his opponent, “I would have come out sooner, but I had to call my opponent to concede, and it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv.”

 

All of this engendered the opposition of pro-Israel groups, which has created another grievance for Massie and his supporters. But there’s no reason that virulently anti-Israel advocates should be immune from pushback from their fellow citizens who disagree with them. One would think a good libertarian would at least understand this.

 

Who knows how much the contention over Israel moved the district’s voters one way or the other. The outcome demonstrates, though, that the mindless anti-Zionism that has become popular with podcasters is not a ticket to success in Republican primaries.

 

The same is not true on the Democratic side. So far this cycle, Graham Platner, a socialist anti-Israel activist who for decades had a Nazi tattoo, drove Maine’s sitting governor out of the Senate primary. On Tuesday night, the Hasan Piker–endorsed Chris Rabb, who made opposition to Israel a key part of his campaign, coasted to the nomination in a Philadelphia-area district.

 

The top Democratic vote-getter in a San Antonio–area congressional district in Texas was Maureen Galindo, who has pledged to write legislation to turn an ICE detention center into a prison for “American Zionists.” She will now face a run-off against the saner candidate, Johnny Garcia. In contrast, Ken Paxton, a Senate candidate on the Republican side who has won Trump’s endorsement, is staunchly pro-Israel and fought antisemitism as attorney general.

 

These data points suggest that among Democrats anti-Zionism has become a litmus test for successful anti-establishment candidates, but that’s not the case in the GOP. Let’s hope that Cenk Uygur Republicans never become a thing.

DNC Autopsy Exposes the Left’s ‘Gaza’ Excuse as Nonsense

By Noah Rothman

Friday, May 22, 2026

 

It’s hard to summon any sympathy for Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin following his reluctant decision to release a half-finished and wholly unsatisfying draft of the party’s long-awaited 2024 election “autopsy.” His fellow Democrats may, however, commiserate with the embattled party functionary over his torment by the far-left activist class amid its effort to force him to rewrite history.

 

Back in February, Axios reporter Holly Otterbein dropped a bombshell: The autopsy’s release was delayed due to internal Democratic friction over acknowledging the degree to which Benjamin Netanyahu tanked Kamala Harris’s presidential bid. According to Otterbein’s sources within the Institute for Middle East Understanding (IMEU) Policy Project, which had supposedly been granted early access to the report, the Biden administration’s pro-Israel policies alienated fellow activists, handing the election to Donald Trump. Worse, the DNC was covering up what it knew, perhaps in a suicidal effort to preserve those pro-Israel policies — an indication of the extent of Israel’s malign reach.

 

The far left took the report as gospel. The “uncommitted” movement — an anti-Israel revolt against Harris originating within Muslim communities in Michigan — cost Harris winnable states, they said. If Harris had been willing to “consider an arms embargo on Israel as it continued its genocide against Palestinian people in Gaza,” RootsAction director Norman Solomon told the far-left talk show host Amy Goodman, there is “no doubt” that “she would have gained a lot more votes than she would have lost.” Indeed, in her post-campaign memoir, Harris herself accused Biden of hurting her chances by giving Netanyahu a “blank check” to prosecute the post-October 7 war against Hamas (all evidence to the contrary notwithstanding).

 

It was all nonsense. The draft autopsy released to the public on Thursday contains no mention of either the Gaza Strip or Israel — not even once. With the exposure of the lie that the activists had retailed for months, those same activists pivoted to savaging the DNC for failing to produce fabricated evidence designed to prop up their delusion of self-importance.

 

The onetime DNC apparatchik David Hogg insisted, “We need to acknowledge the role that Gaza played in us losing younger voters,” whether that is true or not. Michigan Democratic Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed accused the Committee of choosing “to ignore the impact that our party’s failure to get it right on human rights had on the outcome of the 2024 election.” Maine’s Graham Platner was similarly incensed. “The words ‘Gaza’ and ‘genocide’ appear precisely zero times in the DNC autopsy,” he fumed. “Turning a blind eye to crimes against humanity was a grave injustice, and a terrible election strategy.”

 

The most durable conspiracy theories are those that are inherently unfalsifiable. Indeed, any effort to falsify them deepens their believers’ convictions. This one is a classic example. In the activists’ framework, the DNC’s failure to reference Gaza, Israel, or the imaginary “genocide” in the Palestinian territories is more evidence of pernicious Israeli influence.

 

Kamala Harris’s defeat may be one of the most overdetermined phenomena in modern political history. Her loss was attributable to Joe Biden’s infirmities and the party’s mulish refusal to acknowledge them, the inflation and migrant influx over which he presided, and her objective lack of political talent. Late deciders “were more concerned about Democrats being too extreme than Republicans,” one of the hundreds of data-rich post-election analyses read. The Jews’ supposedly mesmeric hold over Joe Biden’s presidency dominated the thinking of only a handful of far-left obsessives, the overwhelming majority of whom pulled the lever for Harris despite their misgivings. Pre-election polling found that — even when it came to foreign policy, a subject about which general election voters are notoriously apathetic — the war in Gaza was a subject of little salience to most voters.

 

Beyond that, as the think tank Third Way’s executive vice president for policy, Jim Kessler, observed, Harris lost in states where Democratic candidates triumphed in state-wide contests. Michigan’s Elissa Slotkin, Arizona’s Ruben Gallego, Nevada’s Jacky Rosen, Wisconsin’s Tammy Baldwin, and North Carolina’s Josh Stein managed to engineer victories for themselves despite maintaining, to varying degrees, a nuanced view toward Israel’s defensive war. Likewise, Kessler noted, Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro had and maintains the support of a majority of Keystone State Democrats, all while Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman has shed Democratic support. The factor driving that discrepancy seems more likely to be their relative hostility toward Trump, not their almost indistinguishably sympathetic outlook toward Israel.

 

The evidence in support of the notion that an electorally relevant segment of the activist left scuttled Harris’s campaign is so thin that we can see why the activist class would attempt to strongarm Democrats into falsifying some. That’s all this ever was: a power play. It was a campaign prosecuted by the querulously myopic anti-Israel left to bully the DNC into conceding that they commanded more political authority than was empirically observable. And now that their strongarming failed, they’re busily accusing the DNC of executing a vast cover-up. And it might work.

 

Rank-and-file Democrats have every reason to be furious with a party that clearly refuses to debrief their voters. Martin himself admitted that the report “does not meet my standards, and it won’t meet your standards.” It is a dog’s breakfast of excuse-making and obfuscation, dressed up in nauseatingly saccharine prose. That anger will be exploited by the unscrupulous.

 

The activist left should be thanking the DNC for forcing them to confront their own impotence. After all, they failed.

 

They failed to muscle (literally) the party into endorsing their preferred delusions in 2024. They failed to extort the party into retroactively giving them more authority than they objectively deserved in 2025. And they failed to force the party into authoring a revisionist history of that election in 2026. Given this record of failure, you’d think Democrats would feel no qualms about excising this political tumor. But they dare not practice that sort of political hygiene.

 

Movements like these don’t win power through persuasion. They ascend through intimidation, menace, and the selective application of force. And that is why they’re rising to a place of primacy within the Democratic coalition today, even though their minority status within the Democratic Party should be clear. They will not countenance reality. Those who confront them with it risk real consequences. And all in the name of “anti-fascism.”

The Curious Case of Trump vs. Trump vs. Trump

By Kevin D. Williamson

Friday, May 22, 2026

 

To recap: Donald Trump has sued the Donald Trump administration over alleged wrongdoing by the Donald Trump administration, and an out-of-court settlement between Donald Trump and the Donald Trump administration will have Donald Trump’s DOJ ponying up the better part of $2 billion to be put into a fund controlled by Donald Trump and used for the benefit of—let’s check in here with dead-eyed White House trash panda J.D. Vance—“people who voted for Donald Trump and participated in the January 6th protests.”

 

We are going to need a whole brigade of additional tally-men to tally the bananas in this bananas republic.

 

One group of Trump sycophants negotiating with another group of Trump sycophants for the benefit of Trump sycophants and Trump himself: surely the toughest negotiation since Harry S. Stamper told the powers that be that none of his crew wanted to pay taxes again—“EVER”—in Armageddon. Trump did not demand immunity from taxes—only immunity from being investigated or prosecuted for not paying his taxes, for tax fraud, or for other tax-related shenanigans: immunity for himself, for his business associates, for Uday and Qusay and the rest of his ghastly cretinous spawn.

 

We are so used to hearing the words “billion” and “trillion” thrown around when talking about Washington spending that the sum in question—$1.776 billion, a number chosen for imbecilic marketing purposes—might seem measly. But that’s a good-sized squadron of high-end fighter jets, about 20 F-35s. It is more than the National Science Foundation will spend in a decade on its “X-Labs” program to support research into transformative technologies in fields such as quantum computing. The money is not the main complaint here—comically transparent graft is a bad policy at any price—but it is worth understanding that the sum in question is not trivial. And who is to say that Trump will not exceed that $1.776 billion budget for enriching his political allies? It is not as though the administration is waiting around for Congress to appropriate the funds.

 

Speaking of which: Congress, as usual, is doing approximately squat. Sen. John Thune of South Dakota has announced that he is “not a big fan” of the presidential slush fund, but, so far, he has taken no action to put a stop to this nonsense. Someone should introduce Sen. Thune to somebody in a position of real influence in Washington—say, the Senate majority leader or someone like that. Surely, a figure as powerful as the Senate majority leader would not just sit around like some useless putz and piss and moan about it all—that guy would do something, right?

 

J.D. Vance, the coprophagic charlatan who once compared Trump to Adolf Hitler before becoming the full-time monkey-butler serving the totally-nothing-like-Hitler administration, thinks the January 6 rioters—the dimwitted brownshirts in Trump’s failed 2021 coup d’état—just need a little more love and understanding, saying, in defense of the slush fund gambit:

 

You know who never, ever gets an ounce of sympathy when it comes to that disproportionate sentencing is people who voted for Donald Trump and participated in the January 6th protests.

 

And guess who is lining up with their hands out? The pillow guy, of course. Who else? The ONAN guys. [Not a typo. Not really, all things considered.] Proud Boys gruppenführer Enrique Tarrio. Registered sex offender Andrew Taake, who got a six-year sentence for assaulting police officers on January 6, was pardoned by Trump with a bonus get-out-of-jail-free card on a separate child-sex charge, and complains that he grew bazongas in prison because doctors had him injected with estrogen during his stay.

 

Which is to say: the biggest parade of schmucks, chiselers, lunatics, conspiracy kooks, and criminals since Trump’s last Cabinet meeting.

 

I already have heard from a few of my remaining conservative friends, out there in their bunkers: “Surely, this will be the thing that finally breaks the spell!”

 

No, it isn’t.

 

Trump’s slavering loyalists already have forgiven him for trying to overthrow the government—you think they’re going to get big mad over his stealing a little money? Especially when they think they—or someone they know from Twitter!—might get a few bucks out of the deal? Trump was right about his being able to shoot someone on Fifth Avenue without losing any political support—and his implied contempt for his voters is entirely justified.

 

The United States is a country that loves a slogan: E pluribus unum. “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” “All men are created equal.” But there is one that we need to translate into Latin and engrave in marble on some prominent site in the capital city:

 

“Lie down with dogs, get up with fleas.”

Trump Gets It Right, Eventually, on Poland

By Jim Geraghty

Friday, May 22, 2026

 

Warsaw, Poland — Don’t blink, kids, because you don’t hear me say this all that often: President Trump got this decision absolutely right.

 

At least, as far as I can tell. At 4:26 p.m. ET, President Trump posted on Truth Social:

 

Based on the successful Election of the now President of Poland, Karol Nawrocki, who I was proud to Endorse, and our relationship with him, I am pleased to announce that the United States will be sending an additional 5,000 Troops to Poland. Thank you for your attention to this matter!

 

(From the wording of the president’s post, you might think that Karol Nawrocki, a right-of-center candidate from the Law and Justice Party, was recently elected. He was elected in the second round of elections completed in June of last year and inaugurated in August.)

 

If you’ve been reading this newsletter this week, you know that the Polish government was blindsided by the decision to cancel the rotation of the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division — more than 4,000 soldiers and associated equipment to bases in Poland. (The administration later insisted it wasn’t a cancellation, merely a delay.) As I’ve been laying out all week, the Poles have done everything the U.S. — and in particular, the Trump administration — has asked as an ally. Whether or not the cancellation or delay was meant as a slap in the face to Poland, the move was widely interpreted that way.

 

Back on April 27, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said during a school visit in Marsberg, a town in his home region of Sauerland, “The Iranians are clearly stronger than expected and the Americans clearly have no truly convincing strategy in the negotiations either,” and “an entire nation is being humiliated by the Iranian leadership, particularly by the so-called Revolutionary Guards.”

 

No U.S. president likes hearing the leader of an ally declare that his country is being humiliated by a hated enemy. At the beginning of May, the Pentagon announced that the U.S. would withdraw 5,000 troops from Germany.

 

The cancellation or delay of the rotation of troops to Poland came shortly thereafter. A German newspaper observed that the Pentagon’s decisions seemed to be punishing Poland almost as much as Germany:

 

The Sueddeutsche Zeitung questioned why the freeze targeted a country “exemplarily fulfilling all American demands regarding higher defense spending”, while acknowledging that “establishing the reasons for such a move is difficult.”

 

Trump’s Truth Social post didn’t specify if the 5,000 troops from the brigade combat team in Germany will be the ones moving to Poland. But no matter where the U.S. troops come from, it will bring a greater U.S. military presence to Eastern Europe, closer to where the threat is. And as the man who ran the civilian airport that turned into NATO’s main logistics hub for Ukraine told me yesterday, the Russians suddenly get a lot more hesitant and careful when the U.S. military is around.

 

Radek Sikorski, a former National Review contributor who is Poland’s minister of foreign affairs and deputy prime minister, said this morning:

 

Poland as you know, together with Lithuania, is the largest spender in NATO, 4.7 percent of GDP last year, 4.8 percent this year, and I have an additional reason for confidence this morning. I want to thank President Trump for his announcement that the rotation, the presence of American troops in Poland, will be maintained more or less at previous levels. I want to thank the president and everybody who contributed to these decisions: our friends in Congress, Ambassadors Whitaker and Rose, in NATO and Poland, and of course all the Polish officials that have contributed. I think Poland’s reputation as a country that takes defense seriously also helped. . . . All’s well, that ends well. . . . I think this makes Putin very uncomfortable.

 

‘Out Your Window, You Can See Patriot Missile Batteries . . .’

 

The Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs staffers who organized this reporting trip unknowingly took me full circle by making one of our last stops Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport — the site of my first report from this region, back in the summer of 2023.

 

Some things still look the same from my first visit; there are still Patriot missile batteries in a ring around the airport. (Some of them were provided by the Germans.) Convoys of flatbed tractor-trailers carrying smaller green military trucks and Humvees line the roads.

 

Up until the end of 2021, Rzeszów-Jasionka was the eighth-largest airport in Poland, with about as many flights in a year as Dulles International Airport gets in a month. But Rzeszów-Jasionka had two key characteristics. First, it had the second-longest runway of the country’s airports, after Warsaw International, which meant the largest military cargo planes in NATO could land there. Second, it was the civilian airport closest to the Ukrainian border.

 

And so, as former airport CEO Michał Tabisz told us, when NATO needed a logistics hub for sending supplies into Ukraine — everything from military equipment to humanitarian relief going into Ukraine, and medivacs and refugees coming out — the civilian airport he was running suddenly became one of the most important locations in the war.

 

Around Christmas 2021, the buildup of Russian troops on the Ukrainian border became serious enough that he was told to expect a contingent from the Pentagon. In mid-January, the first U.S. troops arrived, and Rzeszów-Jasionka continued to operate as a civilian airport, with large stretches of it turning into a NATO air base.

 

“The Americans told us it was much nicer than Afghanistan — no dust, friendly locals, and everyone speaks English,” Tabisz said.

 

When the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine began in late February, the small airport had the job of “bringing a dozen C-17s a day in, unloading them, refueling them, and sending them back. . . . It was a crazy time. Now, I’m happy to have been part of it, but it was crazy.”

 

Tabisz said that the Russians targeted the airport with cyberattacks, hacking, and physical spying. “Until the Patriot batteries arrived, F-16s were doing air patrols above the airport.

 

You often could hear them but couldn’t see them.”

 

The airport now features the United Kingdom-manufactured Sky Saber, which was the most advanced anti-missile system in NATO when it was deployed.

 

The United Kingdom Ministry of Defense contacted Tabisz and said the system needed to be deployed and up and running “immediately.” Looking back, he says, it should have worried him that the MoD was in such a rush. The Sky Saber is a complicated and advanced system; the British troops told Tabisz that if they could get it up and running within a week, they would pop champagne. They did it in three days, and four days later, they did indeed pop a bottle of champagne in Tabisz’s office.

 

“If we knew how serious it was, we would not have been that brave,” he said with a smile.

 

I asked about any other examples of Russia’s “gray zone” warfare, and Tabisz said that while he’s heard of major attempts at sabotage, arson, drone incursions, and other Russian efforts around Poland and other NATO countries, he always felt like the Russians did less against his airport. “The presence of the Americans always sent a strong signal to the Russians.”

 

Construction on what became Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport began in 1937; those who remember history class will recall that the Nazis invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, interrupting construction. It was built as an air base in 1940 using forced labor; then in 1944, the Nazis destroyed the airfield in the face of advancing Soviet forces; it was rebuilt as a civilian airport during the era of the Soviet occupation of Poland.

 

Thus, after the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, when Germany sent its troops to assist the Ukrainians, it marked the first time since 1945 that German troops were moving into Poland . . . and being welcomed.

 

“When the Luftwaffe landed, we looked at each other and said, ‘The boys are back,’’ Tabisz chuckled. He quickly added that Germany is a valued ally and member of NATO.

 

Throughout the use by NATO, and to this day, Rzeszów-Jasionka Airport is still used by civilians for flights around Europe.

 

“And we never canceled a single flight,” Tabisz boasted.

Grab Your Financial Stake in America’s Decline While You Can

By Noah Rothman

Friday, May 22, 2026

 

The Wall Street Journal published an immensely troubling dispatch on Thursday exposing how cryptocurrency networks — specifically, the formerly China-based crypto exchange Binance — have funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into the hands of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

 

“Foreign law-enforcement officials said they have continued to track money this year flowing through Binance accounts to Iranian entities associated with the regime—identifying transactions as recently as this month,” the Journal reported.

 

Binance’s spokespeople insist the currently Malta-based interest does not tolerate transactions that financially support terrorist entities like the IRGC and its proxies. But that’s hard to believe:

 

Based on how terrorism-financing experts assess the purpose of trading accounts like Zanjani’s, the $850 million in Zanjani transactions, which included both deposits and withdrawals, likely means about $425 million moved through Binance to finance Iran’s military, according to foreign law-enforcement officials and other people familiar with the activity. Binance’s own investigators assessed the accounts were a money-laundering network to finance the regime, according to the compliance reports.

 

None of this should be news to the Trump administration. In 2023, Binance’s founder, Changpeng Zhao, pleaded guilty to charges relating to the violation of U.S. money-laundering statutes — a scheme that enriched child sex traffickers, international scamming operations, and terrorist groups, including “Al Qaeda, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades, and Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ).”

 

Like a bolt from the blue, however, President Trump gave Zhao a pardon last October, putting a premature end to the Justice Department’s three-year monitorship of the crypto exchange. The unanticipated act of clemency made little sense to many observers until the Journal connected the dots.

 

“Binance has also been a key supporter of his family’s World Liberty Financial crypto venture, a business that has driven a huge leap in the president’s personal wealth,” its report read:

 

Binance first reached out to allies of Trump last year, offering to strike a business deal with the family as part of a plan to return the company to the U.S., the Journal reported earlier this year. Representatives of the Trump family have held talks to take a financial stake in the U.S. arm of Binance.

 

Cryptocurrency has long been accused of serving as a vehicle for laundering funds to illicit and illegitimate interests, some of which are opposed to U.S. interests and pose threats to Americans’ physical security. But why should everyone else get rich investing in America’s decline? Now, anyone can grab their own stake in the post-American world — up to and including the president and his closest kin.

 

The promise of cryptocurrency notwithstanding, if it serves merely as a vehicle for criminals and corrupt interests to strip the United States down and sell it off, piece by piece, to its enemies, you might expect the stewards of American interests to take a firmer line against it. And they might have if they hadn’t already gotten theirs.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Bunker Mentality

By Nick Catoggio

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

 

This newsletter is a sworn enemy of optimism. If there’s a gray lining in any otherwise silver cloud, rest assured that I will find it.

 

I can’t find it in the cases of John Cornyn and Thomas Massie.

 

Tuesday began with the president announcing his endorsement of Cornyn’s opponent, state Attorney General Ken Paxton, in Texas’ upcoming Republican Senate runoff. It ended with a Trump-backed challenger ousting Kentucky’s Massie in his House primary. All of that is, superficially, bad news.

 

Cornyn epitomizes normie pre-Trump conservatism, while Paxton is a gleefully corrupt MAGA slobberer. And Massie was one of the few Republicans left in Congress who still stood for antiquated priorities like avoiding trillion-dollar deficits and not letting the president bomb whomever he likes.

 

Seems bad that their careers are over (or soon will be, in Cornyn’s case). It isn’t.

 

John Cornyn’s Senate career long ago descended into pointlessness. Not once in my memory has he raised his voice in a meaningful way against autocracy swallowing the GOP, as Bill Cassidy did after January 6. On the contrary: In his desperation to earn Trump’s support against Paxton, Cornyn flipped on preserving the filibuster, proposed renaming a federal highway after the president, and posted photos of himself deep in thought while reading The Art of the Deal.

 

If that’s what being a “respectable” Republican now requires, the unrespectable alternative will do just as well. Good riddance.

 

Massie is a libertarian for good and for ill—mostly for ill, as libertarians tend to be. He opposes unsustainable entitlement programs … and pasteurized milk. He distrusts big government, as he should, yet too often lets that skepticism lead him straight into Kooktown. He’s tangled repeatedly with supporters of Israel, supposedly because he objects to most forms of foreign aid. But isolationism doesn’t explain why he cast the lone vote against a House resolution condemning antisemitism in 2022 or why he continues to push unsubstantiated theories that Jeffrey Epstein was tied to Israeli intelligence.

 

Pro-Israel donors put big money behind his opponent in the primary campaign, which Massie took to describing as a referendum on “whether Israel gets to buy seats in Congress.” After the results were in last night, he told a crowd of supporters that “I would have come out sooner but I had to call my opponent and concede, and it took a while to find Ed Gallrein in Tel Aviv.”

 

That’s what it takes in 2026, it seems, to build an independent bloc of right-wing support capable of putting up a spirited fight against Donald Trump.

 

The good news on Tuesday went beyond simply shedding dead weight like Cornyn and Massie, though. There’s a lot to be happy about in these results.

 

Declining odds.

 

For starters, the GOP’s odds of holding the Senate have declined.

 

If you believe, as any sentient human should, that maintaining what’s left of the constitutional order depends upon the opposition party controlling Congress next year, you should thank the president today for making that more likely. Democrat James Talarico has a much stronger lesser-of-two-evils pitch to make to Texas swing voters against the slimeball Paxton than he would have had against the bland Cornyn.

 

Even if Talarico falls short, the GOP will be forced to divert campaign dollars that would have been spent on competitive races elsewhere to keep Paxton buoyant in a right-wing stronghold. Democrats narrowly winning in Maine, Ohio, North Carolina, and Alaska in November because Republicans had to plow their cash into saving a bad candidate in Texas will not be a good outcome for the president’s party.

 

Tuesday will also make it harder for Trump to move legislation for the rest of this year.

 

He would say that it was already too hard, which is why he felt no compunction about opposing the more electable Cornyn in Texas’ runoff. If the stiffs in the Senate won’t advance his most radical proposals, he’ll need to replace them with radicals. But do the math: Assuming Paxton wins next week’s runoff, there will be no less than nine lame ducks in the Republican conference with a 10th, John Curtis of Utah, possibly soon to join them. Four of those nine—Cornyn, Cassidy, Thom Tillis, and Mitch McConnell—have various axes to grind with the president. Meanwhile, Susan Collins is facing a tough race in deep-blue Maine and needs to separate herself from the White House. And Rand Paul, a libertarian Massie ally, is apt to feel considerably more aggrieved by Trumpism after last night than he already did.

 

That’s six Republicans who are incentivized to oppose the most dubious elements of Trump’s agenda, and I’m not counting the perennially maverick-y Lisa Murkowski. The White House can afford to lose only three on any vote. (Well, four, if you count crypto-Republican John Fetterman. But still.) It’s not a coincidence that a Senate war powers vote on Iran went against the president for the first time yesterday, with the newly liberated Cassidy joining the Democratic side on the procedural vote.

 

Lay aside all of the nuts-and-bolts political calculations, though. Yesterday’s events were also emotionally satisfying.

 

Just deserts.

 

It’s satisfying that the GOP is about to saddle itself with a cretin like Paxton. For too long, the party has benefited from having figures like Cornyn around to whitewash its depravity, tacitly signaling to right-wingers and swing voters that one needn’t forfeit one’s dignity to support Donald Trump’s GOP. The president may be a lout, but the right’s big tent is still a place for more-or-less decent people like Big John.

 

It isn’t, though, and it’s past time that its normie supporters stop getting to pretend otherwise. Replacing Cornyn with Paxton peels away another layer of denial from conservatives who’ve spent 10 years resisting the truth that they’ve empowered the worst people in America to wreck and loot the country. If they want to continue to vote for this populist criminal syndicate, let them do it without any fig leaves of respectability.

 

It’s also deeply emotionally satisfying to see Senate Republicans so distraught at Trump endorsing Paxton over their friend Cornyn. It couldn’t have happened to a more deserving bunch of traitors.

 

For 16 months, these people looked the other way at every form of corruption, constitutional and pecuniary, that the president’s imagination could conjure. Illegal wars, blatant derelictions of duty, graft so rampant that it can scarcely be tracked: Through their inaction, Republican lawmakers have blessed all of it. Fittingly, the biggest political story in America on the day Cornyn’s and Massie’s fates were sealed was Trump creating a slush fund from taxpayer money to pay his fascist flunkies and getting the IRS to agree not to pursue him or his family for tax cheating they’ve done in the past.

 

His second term has been a sustained exercise in placing himself above the law, and congressional Republicans haven’t lifted a finger to stop him. Certainly, John Cornyn hasn’t. Even Massie, whose Epstein files obsession antagonized Trump, has had little of note to say about the corruption blitzkrieg. The surest way to make an enemy of the president and lose your job is to side with Democrats by holding him accountable for his moral failings, and Republican lawmakers knew that. So they didn’t.

 

It’s the most cowardly abdication of civic leadership in the history of the United States, betraying the Constitution to serve Caesar—and Trump thanked them for it by shanking Cornyn between the shoulder blades anyway, quite possibly squandering the party’s control of the Senate next year in the process. Tell me they didn’t deserve it. Tell me you didn’t laugh.

 

Why, there’s even a chance that Massie will seek revenge by running for president in 2028 as an “America First” independent, gobbling up precious right-wing votes from J.D. Vance and spoiling the GOP’s chances of holding the White House. Won’t that be fun?

 

So it seems to me that everyone won yesterday. America won because the angry Senate Republican majority should be marginally less in thrall to an autocrat for the next seven months. (If we get a Supreme Court vacancy before January and Trump nominates a toady in the Aileen Cannon mold, he might be surprised by the outcome.) Democrats won because their chances of a congressional takeover have improved. And Republicans won because—

 

Well, that’s a little more complicated.

 

An ‘incredible’ decline.

 

“Incredible few weeks for Trump’s political operation,” political journalist Rachael Bade declared last night once Massie’s defeat was assured. “Incredible” is the right word. Her assessment is somehow both true and absurd.

 

The president is on an incredible roll of ridding the GOP of non-sycophants. Within the past two weeks alone, primary voters in Indiana ousted most of the Republican state senators on the ballot who had resisted his demands for redistricting. Primary voters in Louisiana ousted Cassidy, who voted to convict Trump at his Senate trial after January 6. Primary voters in Kentucky ousted Massie, a perennial thorn in the White House’s side. And next week, in all probability, primary voters in Texas will oust Cornyn.

 

In each case, voters acted at Trump’s urging. The evergreen advantage of incumbency in American politics was no match for the president’s wrath. It’s genuinely incredible.

 

But even more incredible is the fact that all of this is happening while his support nationally is halfway down the crapper.

 

A few days ago, for the first time in his second term, Trump’s approval rating dipped below 40 percent in the RealClearPolitics average. Yesterday Nate Silver’s polling tracker had him at 38.4 percent approval and 58.6 percent disapproval—higher than Trump’s disapproval after January 6, higher than Joe Biden’s disapproval after his infamous 2024 debate disaster, and higher than any disapproval number Barack Obama posted throughout his eight-year presidency.

 

A New York Times survey published Monday put the president’s overall approval at 37-59. His net approval on the economy and the war in Iran was more than 30 points underwater; his net approval on the cost of living was more than 40 points in the red. Among independents, his approval stands at 26 percent, below Biden’s following the 2024 debate. Democrats now enjoy a 10-point lead on the generic ballot, enough to take back the House comfortably if it holds up despite Republicans’ recent court victory on redistricting.

 

It is, in fact, “incredible” in light of all that to believe that this has been a good few weeks for Trump’s operation, particularly when you remember where most of his political energy has been spent.

 

On Monday alone, in the span of a few hours, he flipped out because the Senate GOP hit a procedural snag in funding his billion-dollar White House ballroom. Then the Justice Department unveiled the new slush fund that will be used to make the January 6 chuds rich. And then Trump surprised Americans by revealing that he was about to resume his extraordinarily unpopular conflict with Iran, only to be talked out of it—for now—by a bunch of Middle Eastern strongmen.

 

We’ve all grown inured to the insanity of the right since 2016, but sit for a moment with the fact that this is the political posture from which the president is steamrolling his enemies within the GOP. The country is struggling with a cost-of-living crisis that voters elected Trump to solve; he made it much worse instead by starting a war that tanked the global oil supply; and now he wants to extend that war while looting the treasury to pay off his cronies and strong-arming Congress into building him a gilded White House annex.

 

And it’s working for him, at least in Republican primaries.

 

A traditional president who’d been damaged as badly as Trump would be lying low instead of intervening aggressively in primaries, not wanting to taint potential general-election candidates with his tarnished brand. And if he was foolish enough to intervene, his endorsement would inevitably hold less sway with primary voters than it did in better days. Their disappointment in his presidency (so far) and their desire to maximize the party’s chances in November would make them less, not more, likely to follow his lead.

 

That’s not what we’ve seen happen this month, though, and I don’t think there’s any political logic that can explain why. Only psychology can.

 

The Jonestown phase.

 

Last month I wrote about Trump entering his “YOLO phase,” coping with the anxiety of watching his political support erode by replacing deputies like Pam Bondi with even more abject flunkies.

 

The president has lost control over events in Iran and will lose a meaningful degree of control over events domestically if Congress flips in November, a hard pill for a megalomaniac to swallow. Go figure that he might soothe himself by exerting tighter control over the things he does still control, like his Cabinet. Or his party’s primaries.

 

He may be powerless to stop his coalition from eroding, but he’s not powerless to purify what’s left of it by purging dissenters. “Trump appears to have all but given up any pretense that he’s concerned about the increasingly fragile Republican majorities on Capitol Hill,” Punchbowl News marveled this morning in a post bluntly titled, “Trump is doing whatever he wants now.”

 

That’s correct, and that’s the YOLO phase. The president has stopped restraining himself to try to improve congressional Republicans’ midterm chances and is now living his best authoritarian life, letting the chips fall where they may. Endorse Paxton! Launch the slush fund! As for November, que sera, sera.

 

If Trump has entered his YOLO phase, though, Republican voters have correspondingly entered their Jonestown phase.

 

It’s hard to make firm pronouncements about what the average right-wing joe is thinking in 2026 because it’s hard to know whether he or she is still in touch with basic political reality. GOP primary voters might be so punch-drunk after a decade of propaganda about “fake news” that they earnestly believe Trump is popular among Americans, notwithstanding the mountains of polling to the contrary. A red wave is building this fall. They can feel it.

 

But I’m skeptical that their denial runs quite that deep. They’ve been to the gas station recently. They know what’s up.

 

My guess is that they’re mirroring the president’s own bunker mentality in rallying to purge his enemies in primaries, a sort of cultish folie à deux in which punishing Republican heretics at the polls compensates for the right’s declining ability to punish Democrats. Most couldn’t tell you in any detail why they need to be purged, I expect: If you asked voters last night in Kentucky to name a specific vote Massie had cast that warrants turning him out of office, how many could? Twenty percent?

 

More likely is that, having slavishly bound themselves to Trump over the past 10 years, they don’t know what to do as Trumpism falls apart around them except to bind themselves to him even more slavishly. Case in point: When NPR interviewed a group of voters recently and asked them to grade the president’s term so far, one awarded him an A++. Aren’t gas prices hurting you, though, NPR wondered? Absolutely, the voter said, but he’s figured out a way to cope.

 

“Me and my wife have been fasting,” he told the outlet, “and there's a lot of benefits, including one of those benefits is saving money on groceries.”

 

That’s the Jonestown phase, and that’s what Republican primary voters won last night in sending Cornyn and Massie into retirement. They’ve invested every ounce of honor they have in a miserable political project that’s growing more undeniably miserable by the day. Admitting now that they made a mistake would be unbearable.

 

So instead they’re doubling down, purging Trump’s enemies as an emphatic vote of confidence in his leadership—and their own investment in it—at a moment when the rest of the planet has no confidence at all. They would sooner wreck the country than confess their error, and by the end of this, I suspect, they will. Last night was the latest opportunity for them to signal that they have no regrets about what they’ve done to America and that Trump’s critics certainly weren’t right about him all along, nosirree. They took it.

Keeping Antisemites Out of the Tent

By Jonah Goldberg

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

 

I’ve long been fascinated with J.T. Flynn, but I put off reading political scientist John E. Moser’s excellent biography, Right Turn: John T. Flynn and the Transformation of American Liberalism, for nearly 20 years. It just sat on the shelf mocking me until last week. When I took it down, I found that I had hunted-and-pecked it years ago, scribbling a few notes in the margins. But I never gave it the time it deserved.

 

I have a lot to say about Flynn, but my aim today is to talk about antisemitism in American politics, and use Flynn to do it.

 

It’ll take a few minutes to get there, though. First, what you need to know is that Flynn made his name and reputation in the 1920s and early 1930s as a consummate liberal in the muckraking journalist tradition of the Progressive Era. That’s how he saw himself and how people saw him, for much of his pre-WWII career. He wrote a regular column for The New Republic, called “Other People’s Money.” “He detested Herbert Hoover, disdained conservatives—especially members of the American Liberty League—who criticized the New Deal, and mocked those who expressed fears of communism,” Moser writes. “Moreover, he was a close friend of America’s best-known socialist, Norman Thomas, and although he personally denied being a socialist, he endorsed Thomas’s candidacy for president in 1936.” He was a member of New York City’s Board of Higher Education, a non-Marxist lefty in good standing.

 

He is also considered, by his fans and foes alike, perhaps the quintessential avatar of the “old right.”

 

Why? It boils down to three, or really two-and-a-half things. He turned on FDR and the New Deal, and he opposed U.S. entry into World War II as the head of the New York chapter of the America First Committee. Ironically, Flynn was tapped to run the chapter because the AFC brass in Chicago concluded they needed a progressive liberal in good standing to run the New York operation. Flynn had been a major figure inside of the decidedly left-wing Keep America Out of War Congress, which had been founded by Norman Thomas and other socialists. The AFC, worried that it would get smeared as too right-wing or fascist, poached Flynn to counter that impression.

 

How the left went right.

 

So how did Flynn become a patron saint of the old right? I’ll run through a few reasons, very briefly.

 

The New Deal and the Great Depression. Say what you will about the New Deal, but you cannot deny the truth in advertising. It was billed as a fresh start, a do-over, a new compact or bargain. Stuart Chase coined the term and inserted it into an FDR speech. The term stuck. And like a new deal from a fresh deck of cards, all manner of old categories and alignments melted away.

 

New labels. It’s worth keeping in mind that “left” and “right” were very new labels in American politics in the 1930s, as Hyrum and Verlan Lewis demonstrate in The Myth of Left and Right. The terms may have their roots in an 18th-century French seating chart, but they didn’t really start getting used in America—about American politics—until well after the Bolshevik Revolution and the proliferation of communists and communist sympathizers in the United States. The communists called themselves left because they were parroting the lingo of the Bolsheviks who were obsessed with cosplaying the Jacobins. So people who opposed the newly defined “left” in America were increasingly called “right.” I can stop there or give you 20,000 more words about this. So let’s move on.

 

World War II. The Second World War scrambled the international order, which is why we refer to the “postwar liberal order.” That liberal order—which I rather liked—created new categories, and solidified the idea that Nazism and fascism were right-wing and communism, progressivism, and socialism were left-wing. We can argue about all that if you like, but that’s what happened. But one thing a lot of people did was retroactively cast the politics of the 1930s through the prism of what people only fully knew in the 1940s and 1950s. So a lot of anti-war people were indexed as “pro-Nazi” and therefore pro-Holocaust. The former was sometimes fair—there certainly were Nazi sympathizers in the 1930s and the Nazis were vicious towards the Jews from the outset —but the latter is often unfair because most of them didn’t know about the full horror of the Holocaust, because it hadn’t really happened yet.

 

The FDR cult. Comparisons between Donald Trump and FDR are often ridiculous, particularly when meant as a compliment to Trump. But there are similarities. FDR was not a friend of “democratic norms” as the term is often used today, sometimes inaccurately (Many of the norms both men violated should be described as “constitutional” or even “republican”). For instance, he violated the longstanding precedent established by George Washington of only serving two terms, successfully running for president four times.

 

Some people get very angry—or very eye-rolly—when you point out this sort of thing. I think it’s hard for some people to see or admit FDR’s violations of democratic norms for a host of reasons, some good and some bad. But if it’s fair to say there’s a cult of personality around Trump, it’s fair to say there was—and remains—an FDR cult. This is hard for some people to see, in part, because no one likes to admit they’re guilty of irrational cultishness. But another obstacle to clarity is that, unlike Trump, FDR literally had democracy—i.e. the demos—on his side. He commanded massive majorities in Congress, so he could actually get congressional support for many of his schemes. Napoleon III used democracy in much the same way, but that’s a “news”letter for another day.

 

But when the Supreme Court stood in his way, he threatened to pack the court with cronies which, even many of FDR’s fans had to concede, was a violation of those democratic norms.

 

Another similarity between Trump and FDR is that they both dominated the politics of their eras so much that they ended up defining what it meant to be “left” or “right.” Very often, even if you attacked FDR from the left, that made you “right-wing.” Once you look for it, you can see a similar dynamic with Trump. Whether you watch Fox or MS NOW, if you’re “pro-Trump” you’re right-wing and if you’re anti-Trump you’re either on the left or an ally of it—at least for a lot of people.

 

“Isolationism.” World War I was a horrible war. It tore America apart. It aroused all manner of Old World antagonisms in America. Recent immigrants, but especially German-Americans, were demonized and harassed. Domestic terrorism, government crackdowns, censorship, economic rationing, the first Red Scares, not to mention the Spanish Flu epidemic, made the whole period—still fresh in living memory at the time—something reasonable people might not want to replay. Many decent 19th-century-style liberals and fresher 20th-century progressives and socialists were principled non-interventionists for wholly understandable reasons. Their non-interventionism was often born of 19th-century anti-imperialism, particularly anti-British imperialism, not 20th-century pro-Nazism. Many traced their views back to the recent “war to end all wars” but also back to the founding, and Washington’s farewell address. A lot of contemporary interventionists and later historians unfairly fudged this distinction.

 

As the situation in Europe deteriorated and as FDR—rightly!—moved the country closer to intervention, the combination of FDR’s cult of personality, the meddling of pro-Soviet activists and intellectuals, and FDR’s support for Britain combined to virtually define the American left-right divide. You could be a solid progressive Republican like Robert La Follette Jr. or a progressive Democrat like Burton Wheeler and be called a right-winger, reactionary, or conservative because you opposed the war (and by extension FDR). Oswald Garrison Villard, the great civil libertarian and former editor and publisher of The Nation, dubbed by his biographer as “the liberal’s liberal,” became known as a right-winger because he opposed going to war in Europe again, though Villard, as with many others, initially broke with FDR over executive overreach and his court-packing scheme.

 

Again, let me underscore this point. This dynamic was clear before entry in World War II became the central debate of American politics. But that debate accelerated and intensified the dynamic. Flynn was considered an enlightened liberal when he attacked the Herbert Hoover administration. When he broke with the New Deal and started criticizing FDR for out-Hoovering Hoover, he became right-wing, long before the debates over intervention kicked in. He didn’t change, the terms of the debate did.

 

So: When you add all of these factors together, today’s familiar ideological scorecards become a hot mess. Father Coughlin, the famous “right-wing radio priest,” was a huge supporter of the New Deal at first. He was courted and defended by FDR and his surrogates until he broke with FDR from the left. His antisemitism was tolerable when he was on the team, it was disqualifying when he was off. Charles Beard was the greatest living progressive historian until he ended his career as a conspiratorial anti-interventionist right-wing crank, at least according to his detractors (though he did get super cranky and conspiratorial).

 

I didn’t plan on such a long detour, but I think this stuff is not just fascinating and important, it’s also so wildly misunderstood and just plain forgotten that I think clearing the brush is necessary.

 

So, let’s talk about “the Jews.”

 

One of the things you often hear about the old right was that it was antisemitic. I hope I’ve already given some indication of why it might not be so simple. But let’s clarify more. It is absolutely true that some on the old right were antisemites. If we’re going to put Coughlin as part of the old right then, sure there were antisemites among the old right. But it doesn’t end there. William Dudley Pelley, Gerald L.K. Smith, and Gerald B. Winrod were also open Jew-haters and traffickers in antisemitic garbage (Leo Ribuffo’s excellent The Old Christian Right is a good primer on many of those guys).

 

Without getting too distracted again, I need to say that the causality is complicated. Smith, for instance, was a Huey Long protégé and early champion of the Share Our Wealth movement, which was a kind of 100 percent American socialism. When Long was assassinated, Smith picked up antisemitism and later fascism as his focus. I’m okay calling him right-wing, but I’m not okay with saying that Smith or Coughlin were right-wing because they were antisemitic. Spend five minutes on Twitter or read Karl Marx’s “On the Jewish Question,” or Pierre-Joseph Proudhon on the Jews, or the writings of utopian socialist Charles Fourier or foundational anarchist Mikhail Bakunin, or, until recently, Graham Platner’s chest, and you’ll understand that right-wingers do not have a monopoly on antisemitism.

 

But you know who you can’t meaningfully call antisemitic? J.T. Flynn. Moser’s biography relentlessly documents how much he struggled to keep antisemites out of the America First Committee. He closed chapters the moment he suspected they were infiltrated by Jew haters or agents of the German American Bund and similar groups. He tried to kick out pro-Nazi jackasses from AFC events. He’d lose his mind with rage when critics of the AFC accused it of being a “Nazi transmission belt.” He fought valiantly, in his words, “to keep the Jewish issue completely out of the argument” about intervention.

 

I don’t mean to say that Flynn was a raging philosemite, though several of his colleagues in the New York office were Jewish. Rather, Flynn felt that antisemitism undermined the cause. Antisemitism, Flynn wrote, “never had the support of reputable people in this country.” What really drove him crazy was that the charge that the AFC was antisemitic made his job of keeping the Jew haters out all the more difficult. The “war groups,” Flynn wrote, “by daily advertising to the community that the members of our committee were sponsoring an anti-semitic [sic] movement,” led Jew-haters “to crawl out of their holes and try to enlist,” in the AFC.

 

I can understand the frustration, and as fundamentally wrong I think Flynn was about so many things, I have sympathy for him all the same. I also have sympathy for the people who thought the America First Committee was a Nazi transmission belt. Why? Because some chapters and some representatives were objectively pro-Nazi.

 

I don’t think I can be accused of overstatement when I say there’s a lot of overlap in the Venn diagram of pro-Nazism and antisemitism. Today, with the benefit of hindsight, that overlap approaches 100 percent (I’ll shave off a percentage point or two to allow for morons and trolls). But the shaded portion was smaller back then. Lots of people just didn’t want to go to war again, especially German-Americans in the Midwest where non-interventionism was strongest. 

 

Again, I think they were wrong, but it wasn’t crazy to believe that American Jews wanted America to stop Hitler. You know why? Because he was Hitler!

 

In 1941, when Charles Lindbergh—a sincere lover of all things German and a passionate non-interventionist—said in a Des Moines, Iowa, speech that the Jews were among the “powerful forces” pushing America to war, he played into all manner of antisemitic tropes about string-pulling Hebrews manipulating society. It was gross. But it also had some truth to it. Jews wanted to stop Hitler, again, because he was Hitler—and he was winning. This was three years after Kristallnacht, two years after the invasion of Poland, and eight years after Dachau was set up. If you can accept that Jews are human beings, is it really so crazy or outrageous that they might be in favor of stopping Hitler?

 

The double standard for Jews is really amazing. Various ethnic groups had emotional investments in foreign policy. German-Americans weren’t all Nazi sympathizers, but you can understand their reluctance to go to war with Germany. Some East Europeans saw the Bolsheviks as the real threat to their kin in Europe. Others, say the Poles and Czechs, understandably supported stopping the guy who invaded their ancestral homelands.

 

But Jews? How dare they get all Jewy about the Nazis rounding up Jews, taking their homes and businesses, and beating old men and women in the street? How dare they organize and speak up?

 

Flynn was livid about Lindbergh’s speech. He sent his colleagues—many of whom loved the speech—a furious telegram laying out how he was “profoundly disturbed” about Lindbergh’s comments and how they “literally committed the America First movement to an open attack on the Jews.” Flynn wrote Lindbergh a furious letter. He later met with the “Lone Eagle”—as he was sometimes called—and had it out. Lindbergh later wrote in his diary about the meeting, saying “[A]pparently he [Flynn] would rather see us get into the war than mention in public what the Jews are doing.”

 

I think charges of Lindbergh’s antisemitism can be overstated. But I also think, screw that guy.

 

When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor and Germany declared war on America four days later, Flynn demanded that the America First Committee be shut down. Many of his colleagues objected, but Flynn vowed to have nothing to do with the group and worked assiduously to thwart it.

 

I think there are a lot of important takeaways from this chapter in American history. I’ve run too long to get into many of them (tune into the solo Remnant!). But when I look at the scrambling of American politics these days, I find that this largely forgotten history becomes more relevant. Rep. Thomas Massie ran for reelection by railing against the “Epstein class,” Israel, and Israel supporters. The term “Epstein class” isn’t necessarily antisemitic or anti-Israel, but when it comes out of Massie’s mouth I think it is. Massie became a darling of a lot of mainstream progressives—including some who support Israel—because he defied Trump. His political sidekick, the execrable Rep. Ro Khanna, doesn’t call Massie “left-wing” but he might as well. Marjorie Taylor Greene has found ample Strange New Respect on the left for the same reason. The ranks of the younger apparatchiks of the GOP swell with mini-Massies and worse. Tim Miller of The Bulwark is no antisemite, but the ardor of his anti-Trump passion (which I obviously have some understanding of) has driven him to defend not just Hasan Piker, but Massie, and Israel bashers generally.

 

And, once again, the double standard is amazing. Russia and China are settler-colonial imperial powers that can fairly be accused of, at minimum, cultural genocide (in Ukraine, in Xinjiang, in Tibet etc). But Israel is the pariah that arouses passion.

 

I get that pro-Israel groups and donors spent money on defeating Massie. Fine. Can you blame them? The echo with the 1930s is there if you’re willing to listen for it. Jews get targeted for persecution and elimination. Jews take offense and do something. Jews get attacked for doing what virtually any other group would do, and are treated as a uniquely insidious and manipulative undifferentiated blob of people for it.

 

By the way, depending on how you measure these things, Israel doesn’t particularly stand out for its spending on lobbying in America. For instance, from 2016 to 2024 according to Foreign Agents Registration Act data (I checked), China, Japan, Liberia, South Korea, the Marshall Islands, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the Bahamas, and the UAE spent more, sometimes a lot more than Israel (something even the Quincy Institute tacitly acknowledges). I’ve heard quite a bit about the China and Qatar lobbies. When was the last time you heard the anti-Israel lobby fanatics talk about Bahamian or Liberian “meddling” in America?

 

We don’t have room for a seminar on the dividing lines between antisemitic, anti-Israel, and “anti-Zionist” views, but I can concede such lines do exist, at least on paper. But those distinctions get blurry in the real world. As Flynn learned, when you take a position—no matter how intellectually defensible—that finds “the Jews” on the other side of that position, people who really dislike “the Jews” will flock to it. That doesn’t make you antisemitic. But if you welcome antisemites into your ranks because they’re somehow on your team, you are part of the problem. For some, it’s all about Trump and resisting him. For others it’s all about supporting Trump (see J.D. Vance’s and Kevin Roberts’ “big tent” talk). And yet for still others it’s all about opposing Israel or the Jews, and if that leads to opposing or supporting Trump, so be it. And for a great many it’s a bit of both.

 

Flynn, to his eternal credit, tried at least to fight that tide. When I look around today, I don’t see many people willing to tilt at similar windmills the way Flynn did.