By Nick Catoggio
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Populists tend to believe that the world suffers from too
little ruthlessness, not too much, especially toward groups that the
American right has traditionally despised. So I was surprised when Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene hopped onto Twitter a few days ago to condemn
“genocide.”
Not one of those fakey metaphorical genocides that “race
realists” are
forever stewing about, either. Greene meant it literally.
She was responding to her Republican colleague, Rep.
Randy Fine of Florida. Last week Fine flagged a news report about 15
Palestinians dying of hunger in Gaza and commented, “Release
the hostages. Until then, starve away. (This is all a lie anyway. It amazes me
that the media continues to regurgitate Muslim terror propaganda.)” That was
callous even by MAGA standards, but belonging to Donald Trump’s party normally
means never having to say you’re sorry for hating the enemy too much.
So imagine Fine’s shock when Greene called him onto the
carpet. “I can only imagine how Florida’s 6th district feels now that their
Representative, that they were told to vote for, openly calls for starving
innocent people and children,” she wrote. “It’s the
most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct 7th in Israel was horrific and
all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and
starvation happening in Gaza.”
Marjorie Taylor Greene has a compassionate streak. Who
knew?
Tucker Carlson also has a compassionate streak, you’ll be
pleased to hear. Yesterday he published an interview with
longtime Israel critic John Mearsheimer in which Mearsheimer likewise
denounced America’s complicity in the “genocide” playing out in Gaza. Tucker
knew whom to blame. “They’re the most vicious people I’ve ever dealt with,” he said
of pro-Israel lobbyists, despite having “dealt with” Vladimir Putin face-to-face last year.
“It sounds like our entire foreign policy, at least in the Western Hemisphere,
is based on this one country.”
You may, and should, draw your own conclusions as to why
“America First” nationalists are promoting the most inflammatory term possible
to describe the Jewish state’s campaign in Gaza. But conditions there do appear
to be desperate, more so than at any earlier stage of the war, and Americans
are paying attention. I’ve argued before that the
long-term prognosis is grim for continued support for Israel in a postliberal
United States, but the humanitarian disaster in Gaza has me wondering if I
underestimated how quickly that support might erode.
We’re well on our way to U.S. policy on this subject
becoming as polarized along partisan lines as it is on most domestic issues.
How much longer can the “special relationship” between our two countries, and
with it American aid to Tel Aviv, survive?
Trust no one.
The challenge in assessing what’s happening in Gaza for
someone acting in good faith is that every quasi-authoritative source of
information has an agenda.
Our own Jonah
Goldberg made that point to CNN viewers on Tuesday. “I’ve never been in a
situation in a story where I have such complete distrust for almost every
actor, including Israel’s people, on this stuff,” he said. “I just don’t trust
anything and I don’t want to win the race to be wrong first on any of this
stuff, and that’s terrible because there are definitely people suffering.”
Whom should you trust among those that are alleging
widespread hunger in Gaza? The local health ministry? That’s tantamount
to trusting Hamas.
The United Nations? They’ve been biased
against Israel for decades. Last year the U.N.’s relief arm in Gaza fired
nine employees on suspicion of participating in the October 7
pogrom.
American media? Their own flagrant pro-Palestinian
sympathies have supported a cottage industry of watchdogs and fact checkers that hasn’t
yet run out of content in the many years that I’ve been following this topic.
Just two days ago the New York Times had to append
a note to a photo of a horribly emaciated boy in Gaza, clarifying that he
suffers from other health problems that make him unrepresentative of the
average child there.
We can’t trust those who claim that Israel is starving
Gazans. Does that mean we should trust Benjamin Netanyahu, who claims
it isn’t happening?
We should not, as there’s plenty of reason to think that
hunger may have reached crisis levels. Shipments of all forms of aid, food most
notably, collapsed
after Israel imposed a blockade in March and has yet to approach the levels
seen before then. The price of flour has reportedly soared
at local markets, reflecting the scarcity. Sources at the (ahem) U.N. claim
that 500 to 600 aid trucks need to enter Gaza each day to meet demand;
according to the Israeli military, an average of just
146 have crossed the border daily since the war began.
There are eyewitness
reports
from locals about starvation, dehydration, and shortages. Israeli troops have
allegedly opened fire repeatedly on Palestinians during aid deliveries as
crowds desperate for provisions turned unruly, killing more
than 1,000 people—again, according to the U.N. Normally reliable defenders
of the Jewish state, like Democratic Rep. Ritchie Torres,
are alarmed enough to have begun warning of a “quagmire” in Gaza. Coverage of
mass hunger in the Strip has reportedly broken
through in Israel’s own media.
Netanyahu himself stands accused of prolonging
the war needlessly to protect his own hold on power. If he quits Gaza
without making it safe for new Israeli settlements, the far right might quit
his coalition; if that happens, his party will likely lose in the next Knesset
elections and he’ll end up back
in criminal jeopardy on corruption charges.
Amid all that, to insist that there’s no crisis in Gaza
is to risk taking an essentially populist approach to news consumption, using
distrust of “enemy” outlets to justify ignoring or dismissing out of hand
evidence that’s politically uncomfortable to reckon with.
The alternative is to concede that there is a crisis but
to remind the world which side is to blame for it. Hamas started the war; Hamas
could end it by returning the hostages and surrendering; and Hamas is
indifferent at best and enthusiastic at worst about Palestinian suffering. It
may or
may not be true that the group is exacerbating the food shortage
deliberately in order to raise
the diplomatic pressure on Israel to relent, but no one would put it past
them.
And yet: If you believe that the war should go on until
every hostage is freed and every jihadi neutralized even if it means starving
the population of Gaza, then you’re with Randy Fine—and most people aren’t with
Randy Fine. It cannot be that one side has carte blanche morally to punish the
other in pursuit of its goals because that other side bears ultimate
responsibility for the conflict. Especially not now, after Hamas’ leadership
has already gotten the full Goodfellas “Layla”
treatment from the Israeli military.
The sense most Americans have at this point, I suspect,
is that Israel is bouncing the rubble in Gaza, continuing to lay waste to the
strip despite the risk of a humanitarian calamity and to
no good end after having already accomplished what was reasonably
achievable there.
And that comes with a political price.
The end of aid.
On Wednesday night the Senate easily defeated two
measures proposed by
Bernie Sanders to block further arms sales to Israel. No surprise there.
Military aid to the Jewish state always enjoys bipartisan support.
The newsy part was the margin. More than half the
Democratic conference voted with
Sanders, including some mainstream liberals like Jeanne Shaheen.
On top of the human toll of the war, there’s now a political toll: Temporarily
or not so
temporarily, cutting aid to Israel has become the mainstream position of
one of our two major parties in Congress’ upper chamber.
There might be no going back. On Tuesday a new Gallup
poll found U.S. support for the campaign in Gaza down to 32 percent, with
60 percent disapproving. Among Democrats, support has dropped to—no typo—8
percent. For the first time in nearly 30 years, Netanyahu is viewed unfavorably
by more than half of Americans.
Other surveys are in line with that. A CNN poll
published earlier this month saw a scant 23 percent of Americans and 7 percent
of Democrats say that Israel’s actions in Gaza have been “fully justified.” In
both surveys, opinion among independents is much closer to the left than it is
to the right. A mere 25 percent of indies now approve of the Gaza campaign
while just 14 percent agree that Israel’s actions there are “fully justified”
per Gallup and CNN, respectively.
All of that follows other polling published this year
tracking declining left-wing support for the Jewish state writ large. In March Gallup
revealed that 59 percent of Democrats now sympathize more with the Palestinians
than with Israelis, the first time a majority of the party has tilted towards
the former group. A month later the Chicago
Council on Global Affairs found Democrats’ “feelings” about Israel dipping
to a score of 41, the first time in nearly half a century of polling that it’s
fallen below 50.
Skepticism of Israel is increasingly the safe position
for Democratic officials, and last night’s Senate vote proved that they know
it.
“It won’t last,” you might say. “Democrats won’t risk
alienating Jews, one of their most dependable constituencies, by distancing the
party from Israel permanently.” Maybe, but it’s worth noting what Data for
Progress, a left-wing outfit, found when it polled New York City
Democrats—a cohort with a few Jewish voters, as I recall—earlier this month.
Some 78 percent agreed that “genocide” is happening in Gaza while 79 percent
said the U.S. should restrict weapons sales to Israel until, among other
things, Israel stops attacking civilians there.
If you think Jews are single-issue voters, you’re making
the same dubious assumption that Donald Trump did when he accused those who
vote Democratic of being “disloyal to
Israel” and, er, hating
their religion. It simply doesn’t follow that a Jewish Democrat who
supports Israel should necessarily prefer U.S. leadership that’s reluctant to
put pressure on Tel Aviv over one that’s more willing to do so—although it
doesn’t surprise me that Trump might struggle to understand that.
That’s what I meant earlier about populists extolling
ruthlessness. To Trump, it’s unfathomable that a voter who cares about Israel
might favor a party that won’t let Israel behave as ruthlessly as he will. How
could a Jew possibly vote for the side that wants to treat starvation in Gaza
as a red line?
In the end, this is a numbers game. Democrats should
worry about shedding Jewish voters unless support for Israel falls so
far among the American middle that the party ends up netting votes on balance
by being harder on Tel Aviv. If you believe polls like Gallup’s and CNN’s, we
may have already reached the point where attempts in Congress to withhold aid
are no longer a political liability for Democrats.
And it’s not hard to imagine a scenario where they become
an asset.
The horseshoe.
I’ve written before about how Trump has become an
unlikely champion for hawks, especially those of us who support Israel.
In a way, it’s another facet of his
politics of nostalgia. The president is a baby boomer and many of his
tastes reflect that—including his solidarity with the Jewish state, as there’s
a yawning
age gap among Americans over Israel that keeps showing up in polling. The
Gallup survey I mentioned earlier found 49 percent support for the campaign in
Gaza among Americans 55 and older, but just 9 percent support among those 18 to
34. Among that same younger cohort, 33 percent told CNN
that the campaign was at least partly justified; compare that to the 67 percent
who said so among those 65 and up.
Donald Trump is an old man, and he’s acting like one by
supporting Israel. But he won’t be around forever.
The “genocide” rhetoric from Marjorie Taylor Greene and
Tucker Carlson is another obvious attempt by the nucleus of “fundamentalist
MAGA” to nudge the right in the direction it wants populism to take
post-Trump. Perhaps they’re kidding themselves in believing that Republicans
will ever be meaningfully anti-Israel: Between the GOP’s hawkish DNA, the
religious support for the nation among dispensationalist Christians, and the
tribal antipathy the right is likely to go on feeling toward Palestinian
Muslims, they have their work cut out for them.
In fact, GOP support for the Gaza campaign in Gallup’s
poll stands at 71 percent and Netanyahu’s favorability within the party is the
highest it’s ever been. Better luck next time, Tucker.
Still, I would not underestimate the degree to which the
cult of personality around the president might be buoying up right-wing support
for Israel amid strong postliberal downward pressure. The mere mention of his
name in polling questions about sending weapons to Ukraine, for example, can
send Republican support for the idea skyrocketing by 30+ net points.
For members of his party, his imprimatur on policy is talismanic. There will be
no GOP turn against Israel so long as he’s in Tel Aviv’s corner.
But after he’s gone? Who knows?
If fundamentalist MAGA gains influence and fills the
power vacuum left by Trump, it’s possible we’ll see a left-right populist
horseshoe alliance in Congress in which Greene’s faction and Bernie’s faction
come together to cut aid to Israel. It’s never made sense as a matter of logic
that “America First-ers” like J.D. Vance would make a
special exception for Tel Aviv from their normal hostility to foreign aid.
It makes sense only as a matter of raw politics, because they’re afraid how
their base will react if they insist on consistency.
Apres Trump, with more dogmatic populists
potentially ascendant on the right, perhaps that taboo will weaken. The
president’s own record might be exploited as a reason for weakening it, in
fact. If he builds on the Abraham Accords by brokering a peace deal between
Israel and other regional powers, MAGA fundies may argue, the need for a
“special relationship” between Washington and Tel Aviv will be over. Having
broken Iran and its proxies with U.S. help, and with Sunni nations finally
accepting the nation’s legitimacy, what more could the Israeli people possibly
want from us?
We might plausibly see a coalition form in the House and
Senate between a majority of Democrats and a sizable minority of Republicans in
favor of cutting off aid in all forms to the Jewish state. Electoral interests
would encourage it too. If it’s true that young voters, especially nonwhite
ones, are America’s
new “swing” contingent, then both parties have a strong incentive to recoil
from an ally that those voters disdain.
Maybe it won’t be so bad. Given the military might on
display over the past two years, it could be many years before some rival power
is foolish enough to thrust Israel into another conflict that will force
America to take sides.
But when it does happen, don’t assume that we’ll choose
the right side next. Especially if Netanyahu and his government don’t figure
out a way to end the Gaza crisis soon.
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