Opinion
Bret
Stephens
Meet the
New Antisemites, Same as the Old Antisemites
Nov. 11,
2025
Among
conservatives, Tucker Carlson paid virtually no price for blaming “a bunch of
guys sitting around eating hummus” for Jesus’ death.Credit...Carlos
Barria/Reuters
Bret
Stephens
By Bret
Stephens
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/11/opinion/antisemitic-politics-carlson-fuentes.html
The good
news from the recent donnybrook over Tucker Carlson’s interview with Nick
Fuentes, the Hitler fanboy with a sizable social-media following, is that it
has at last forced conservatives to reckon with the sewer pipe of antisemitism
bursting through their walls.
Better
news: Many have risen to the occasion. That includes Senator Ted Cruz, who
called out his fellow Republicans for being too timid to condemn Carlson; The
Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, which denounced “this poison in their
own ranks”; and Heritage Foundation people who resigned in disgust after Kevin
Roberts, the organization’s president, offered a lickspittle apologia for
Carlson. Even Roberts felt compelled to disavow his own performance, though he
persisted in describing Carlson as “my friend.”
The bad
news is that none of this is going away anytime soon. If ever.
Antisemitism
was supposedly banished twice from the conservative universe: first in the
1950s, when William F. Buckley Jr. decreed that nobody on the masthead of the
antisemitic American Mercury would appear in the pages of his own National
Review; second in the 1990s, when he said it was “impossible to defend” Pat
Buchanan from charges of antisemitism. Such was Buckley’s prestige on the right
that none other than Carlson issued his own denunciation of Buchanan: “I’m not
hysterical on the subject,” he said on C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal” in 1999,
“but I do believe that there is a pattern with Pat Buchanan of needling the
Jews.”
Now the
Heritage Foundation and various conservative publications are pressing the
Trump administration to award an unrepentant Buchanan the Presidential Medal of
Freedom. The notion that Winston Churchill, not the German Führer, was the
villain in World War II — another of Buchanan’s hobbyhorses — is again gaining
ground on the right. Buchanan’s obsessive loathing of Israel, along with his
conviction that the pro-Israel lobby dictates U.S. foreign policy, is also
gaining ground — a mirror image of the views of the anti-Israel left and a
reminder of the French aphorism “Les extrêmes se touchent.” Extremes meet.
How did
this happen? Cynicism is one reason. “The fact that antisemitism is the
socialism of fools is an argument not against, but for, antisemitism; given the
fact that there is such an abundance of fools, why should one not steal that
very profitable thunder?” Leo Strauss, the philosopher, observed in 1962.
Bluntly, his point was that a bigotry for morons — a.k.a., “The Jews did it” —
will always be political gold in a world of morons. Candace Owens, the
right-wing podcaster, gets this: Her popularity has soared as her Jew-hatred
has become more overt.
A second
factor is the forced merger of Christianity with conservatism.
Mainstream
American conservatives used to believe our sacred texts were the Declaration of
Independence and the U.S. Constitution; “Reflections on the Revolution in
France” and “The Road to Serfdom.” Now it’s the New Testament. We once thought
that religious convictions should be a little more respected in our secular
Republic. Now this is supposed to be a Christian regime that tolerates Jews.
(Others, not so much.) When Carlson, speaking at Charlie Kirk’s memorial
service, compared the slain conservative to Christ brought down by “a bunch of
guys sitting around eating hummus thinking about, ‘What do we do about this guy
telling the truth about us?’” the inference could have been lost on nobody.
Among conservatives, he paid virtually no price for it.
Then
there’s political ideology. The MAGA movement is not antisemitic. But many of
its core convictions are antisemitic-adjacent — that is, they have a habit of
leading in an anti-Jewish direction.
Opposition
to free trade, or to a welcoming immigration policy, or to international law
that crimps national sovereignty, are legitimate, if often wrongheaded,
political positions. But they have a way of melding with hoary stereotypes
about “the International Jew” working across borders against the interests of
so-called real Americans. You can be sure that, somewhere on social media,
someone will respond to this column by pointing out that my Kishinev-born
grandfather changed his name from Ehrlich to Stephens — evidence, supposedly,
of sneakiness in my DNA. It’s the type of right-wing identity politics you
inevitably get where the question of where you are from matters more than the
question of where you are trying to go.
Finally,
it bears reminding that antisemitism isn’t merely a prejudice. It’s a
conspiracy theory about Jews. Who actually killed Christ? Or brought on the
bubonic plague? Or got America embroiled in unnecessary wars in the Middle
East? Or replaces American workers with cheap immigrant labor? The idea that
modern politics amounts to a malicious scheme organized by an insidious cabal
of deep-state insiders and globalists at the expense of ordinary people is now
received wisdom on the right, paralleling far-left convictions about the
purported evils of Zionists and their billionaire backers.
Jews
don’t have the luxury of being indifferent to either threat. The tsunami of
progressive antisemitism that hit after Oct. 7 is being followed by another
wave, just as tall.


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