By Seth Mandel
Thursday, January 22, 2026
A number of Democrats were clearly hoping that once the
war in Gaza was over, they could stop talking about it. But that’s not how
litmus tests work.
“I am somebody who looks at the videos, the photos, the
amount of pain that has been caused in the Middle East, and you can’t not be
heartbroken,” Michigan Senate candidate Mallory McMorrow, who in October joined
the jackals in falsely accusing Israel of genocide, told
a local radio station. “But I also feel like we are getting lost in this
conversation, and it feels like a political purity test on a word — a word that, by the way, to people who lost
family members in the Holocaust, does mean something very different and very
visceral — and we’re losing sight of what I believe is a broadly shared goal
among most Michiganders, that this violence needs to stop, that a temporary
cease-fire needs to become a permanent cease-fire, that Palestinians deserve
long term peace and security, that Israelis deserve long term peace and
security, and that should be the role of the next U.S. senator.”
It’s awfully rare to have a “genocide” take place,
acknowledge it, and then plead with people to stop talking about it. One reason
McMorrow wants to stop talking about it is that she doesn’t actually think
Israel committed genocide, just as she doesn’t think the earth is flat. But she
caved to pressure to say so because she wants the votes of people who think the
Jewish state should be destroyed.
In other words, McMorrow, like many of her fellow
Democrats, falsely accused Israel of genocide to please actual promoters of
genocide.
In that sense, of course McMorrow doesn’t want to
talk about her disgraceful kowtowing to anti-Semites for political gain.
Yet she’s not wrong about the problem of some in her
party wanting to use a blood libel as a purity test. It’s just that if she
really thinks the war in Gaza was a genocide, she wouldn’t be so troubled by
its status as a litmus test.
Put another way: Should “genocide” be a litmus test? I’d
bet McMorrow thinks so. If she were running against a Holocaust denier, for
example, would she say that she is troubled by the amount of criticism the
denier were facing? To ask the question is to answer it.
McMorrow almost gets there herself, when she says that
the genocide accusation “does mean something very different and very visceral”
to those “who lost family members in the Holocaust.” But it’s not that the word
genocide means something very different to them. Genocide was coined to
categorize the Holocaust. That’s what genocide means. People who lost
family in the Holocaust are bothered by the term being applied inaccurately.
What McMorrow wants is to earn points with her party’s
base by passing the litmus test without having to revisit what she had to do to
pass that test. She never considers her other option: to answer the question
honestly.
Similarly, today Jewish Insider reports
that Scott Wiener is stepping away from his post as co-chair of the California
legislature’s Jewish Caucus. As I wrote
last week, Wiener declined to say Israel’s counteroffensive in Gaza
constituted genocide at a candidates debate against two of his congressional
primary opponents. He, like Mallory McMorrow, thought they had moved on. He was
wrong, and he got slammed by progressives for equivocating, and so he filmed a
soul-crushingly pathetic video changing his answer to “yes.”
It certainly would be inappropriate for him to continue
on as Jewish Caucus co-chair, and he recognized as much. But I was struck by
his plea for open-mindedness: “As we move through this moment, it is even more
important for Jews here and globally to foster open dialogue and acceptance of
disagreement, even on the hardest of issues.”
Does he feel that way about other genocides? Again, how
much “acceptance of disagreement” does he feel there should be in the Jewish
community toward Holocaust denial?
Wiener and McMorrow—and who knows how many others, but
the number is high—don’t think Israel committed genocide. They don’t actually
believe that there are much more important things to talk about and that
genocide is a distraction. They lowered themselves to gain the approval of
terrible people, and they feel dirty about it, and they would like to not have
to do it again. Their problem is simple: It’s degrading to accuse Israel of
genocide and then have to look at yourself in the mirror.
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