Sunday, 24 November 2024

Jewish pressure group attacks Trump's attorney general pick


Gaetz
© Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesMatt Gaetz at the Republican National Convention • Milwaukee, Wisconsin • July 18, 2024
The Anti-Defamation League has accused US President-elect Donald Trump's nominee for attorney general, Matt Gaetz, of "trafficking in anti-Semitism" and called for him to be barred from office.

Trump announced Gaetz's nomination on Wednesday, declaring that the Florida Republican would end the "partisan weaponization of our justice system." Gaetz is a hardline conservative and staunch ally of Trump, but his nomination rankled some establishment Republicans and angered the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), a Jewish advocacy group that typically supports the Democratic Party.

ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt wrote on X on Wednesday:
"Rep. Matt Gaetz has a long history of trafficking in anti-Semitism - from explaining his vote against the bipartisan Anti-Semitism Awareness Act by invoking the centuries-old trope that Jews killed Jesus to defending the Great Replacement Theory and inviting a Holocaust denier as his 2018 State of the Union guest. He should not be appointed to any high office, much less one overseeing the impartial execution of our nation's laws."
Greenblatt did not fully explain the examples of Gaetz's conduct that he cited.

The Anti-Semitism Awareness Act, which passed the House of Representatives earlier this year but never became law, would have criminalized "contemporary examples of anti-Semitism," including "claims of Jews killing Jesus." As these claims are repeatedly made in the New Testament of the Bible, Gaetz argued that the bill would have essentially outlawed much of Christianity's core text.

The so-called 'Great Replacement Theory' refers to the idea that white people are slowly being replaced in their own lands by non-white immigrants. While this is often written off by liberals as a racist conspiracy theory, the ratio of whites to other races in the US has steadily been shrinking since the mid-20th century.

In 2021, the ADL condemned former Fox News host Tucker Carlson for claiming that Democrats plan to replace America's Republican-voting whites with Democrat-voting immigrants. Greenblatt called Carlson's claims "toxic, anti-Semitic and xenophobic."

Gaetz weighed in on the controversy, calling the ADL a "racist organization."

In 2018, Gaetz invited right-wing pundit Charles Johnson to then-President Trump's State of the Union address on Capitol Hill, prompting another showdown with the ADL. Johnson had previously claimed that 250,000, and not six million, Jews were killed by Nazi Germany during World War II. Gaetz refused to call Johnson a "Holocaust denier," but said afterwards that he "should've vetted him better before inviting him."

It is unclear how Greenblatt's complaint will affect Gaetz's chances of being confirmed by the Senate. While the GOP holds a majority in the upper chamber, four 'no' votes from Republicans plus unified opposition from Democrats would sink the Florida lawmaker's chances of leading the Department of Justice.
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