Ideas
Is the Future of MAGA
Anti-Israel?
For 40 years, Christian Zionism was a powerful force in American
politics. A new generation on the right is taking cues from elsewhere.
Jonathan
Mahler
By
Jonathan Mahler
Dec. 30,
2025, 5:02 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/30/magazine/maga-israel-antisemitism-tucker-carlson.html
When
historians look back on President Trump’s second term, they may see it as the
pinnacle of the Republican Party’s enduring support for Israel. They may also
see it as the moment when the partnership undergirding this support — between
evangelical Christians and the Republican foreign-policy establishment — began
to unravel.
For
decades, the American right’s unwavering advocacy for Israel has effectively
been a sure thing, and the Trump administration’s actions have only affirmed
the strength of this bond. The president has given Israel free rein to bomb
Gaza and to attack enemies across the Middle East, even joining an assault on
Iran’s nuclear facilities this summer; he has negotiated a peace deal in Gaza
that favors Israel; he has defended Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — a guest
at Mar-a-Lago this week — in the face of his ongoing prosecution on corruption
charges. Closer to home, the administration has pressured universities to crack
down on pro-Palestinian activists.
But
inside the Republican Party, something seems to be shifting. A recent Manhattan
Institute survey of Republicans nationwide found that a majority of the party’s
longstanding voters remain firmly pro-Israel, but that a “sizable minority” of
new Republican voters — younger, more diverse and more likely to have voted for
Democrats in the past — are more critical of the Jewish state.
Often,
their sentiments are darker than mere criticism. The Manhattan Institute’s
survey found that a significant number of young Republican voters reported
openly racist or antisemitic views. Some of the comments during an accompanying
focus group with 20 Gen Z conservatives were positively chilling: One
participant praised Hitler’s “leadership values.” Another claimed that Israel
had ties to human trafficking. Still another called Jews “a force for evil.”
Separating
the right’s mounting criticism of Israel — often made on the grounds of
American self-interest — from the rising antisemitism inside the Republican
ranks can be difficult. Many of the ideologies revived by the Make America
Great Again movement, such as nationalism, Christian nationalism and nativism,
have not only helped fuel attacks on America’s support for Israel; they have
given political cover to antisemitism that has been bubbling up since the days
of the so-called alt-right.
The
right-wing media and activist classes now appear to be in an open civil war
over the matter of Israel. Candace Owens has called the Jewish state “demonic,”
while spinning out wild anti-Israel conspiracy theories on her popular weekly
YouTube show. Closer to the mainstream, Tucker Carlson, one of the most
influential MAGA voices, has described Christian Zionism as a “brain virus” and
characterized evangelical support for Israel as “Christian heresy.” In late
October, he hosted the white nationalist influencer and prominent antisemite
Nick Fuentes on his YouTube show; the fallout is still tearing apart the
Heritage Foundation, an institution at the heart of the Republican
establishment. This month, Carlson and Steve Bannon, a fellow nativist, traded
insults with Ben Shapiro, a pro-Israel conservative and an observant Jew, at
the Turning Point USA conference in Phoenix.
Vice
President JD Vance — who is close to Carlson and is, for now, the de facto
future leader of the MAGA movement — has been conspicuously noncommittal on the
fight. Amid the continuing turmoil, he didn’t even mention Israel during his
speech at the Turning Point conference, nor did he denounce the rising
antisemitism on the right, saying instead that he didn’t believe in “purity
tests.” “When I say I’m going to fight alongside of you,” he said, “I mean all
of you — each and every one.”
For more
than four decades, the alliance between evangelicals and pro-Israel
conservatives has been an almost uniquely powerful force in American politics,
shaping not only foreign policy but also domestic elections, with donations
flowing freely every election cycle from pro-Israel Christian groups and
individuals to pro-Israel Republican candidates.
Political
coalitions are inherently perishable. They are created to advance common
interests that invariably diverge at some point. But this particular coalition
was unusual from the start. It was built not just on the belief that defending
Israel was in America’s strategic interests, but also on faith: Many of the
evangelical Christians who have long made up the core of the Republican Party’s
base saw the Jewish people’s return to their biblical homeland and their
subsequent, improbable military victories over their Arab enemies as divine
providence, a sign that the second coming was imminent. Now, other kinds of
Christianity are taking hold in conservative power circles. A growing number of
evangelicals subscribe to a very different understanding of the biblical
prophecies about Christ’s return, while other influential Christians —
including Vance — have been gravitating toward Catholicism. At the same moment,
many Republicans are pushing for a nationalist retreat from American
commitments overseas.
In other
words, the very forces that built this coalition — geopolitics and theology —
are the ones tearing it apart.
A
Messianic Vision
The
Republican Party wasn’t always reliably pro-Israel. It was a Democratic
president, Harry S. Truman, who first recognized the Jewish state in 1948. In
the immediate years after its establishment, Israel, founded under an ideology
of Labor Zionism, was viewed by many conservatives as too socialist. And
besides, an explicitly Jewish state wasn’t exactly a natural ally for the
WASP-dominated Republican establishment. William F. Buckley Jr. was deeply
skeptical of Israel during its early years; in 1956, his magazine, National
Review, called it “the first racist state in modern history.”
The
Arab-Israeli war of 1967 helped turn Buckley and many other conservatives
around. Israel defeated the Soviet-backed forces in just six days, and Cold War
hawks immediately identified a new ally in the struggle against Communism. “Now
Israel could be grafted onto the correct side of the only war that mattered —
the Cold War,” said Sam Tanenhaus, author of “Buckley: The Life and the
Revolution That Changed America.”
The 1967
war also captured the attention of evangelical Christians, then a growing force
in American life. Israel had not only beaten back a coalition of well-armed
Arab states; it had also extended its control over Jerusalem, reunifying the
holy city. To many evangelicals, this was more than an unlikely military
victory. It was an unmistakable sign that history was moving, inexorably,
toward its final climax.
A few
years later, a graduate of the Dallas Theological Seminary and former campus
ministry worker, Hal Lindsey, popularized this belief — known as premillennial
Dispensationalism — in his mass-market paperback “The Late Great Planet Earth.”
Lindsey aimed his book squarely at baby boomers — “the searching generation,”
he called them — offering a divine truth based on his own reading of biblical
prophecies. Now that the Jewish people had returned to their homeland and taken
control of Jerusalem, all they needed to do was rebuild the temple destroyed by
the Romans to enable the rapture (“the ultimate trip,” as Lindsey called it) to
commence. It became the best-selling nonfiction book of the 1970s.
Televangelists
like Jerry Falwell took up Israel’s cause around this time. They saw the Cold
War through a religious lens, casting Israel as the hero against Soviet
atheists and their Muslim proxies. They offered a new theological paradigm for
evangelicals, de-emphasizing the Christian tradition of trying to convert Jews
and instead stressing the divine importance of supporting the State of Israel.
These evangelicals spoke of Judeo-Christian civilization out of a belief that
America (to them, of course, a Christian nation) and Israel were both uniquely
privileged in the eyes of God. Falwell folded support for Israel into the
“Biblical Plan of Action” underpinning the Moral Majority, his political
organization that helped ensure Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980 and
effectively gave birth to the modern Christian Right.
It was
during the Reagan years that the G.O.P. truly became America’s pro-Israel
party. Reagan claimed Israel as a democratic partner in the Cold War against
totalitarianism, and forged an alliance with the conservative Likud party,
which took power in 1977 and shared his free-market ideology. He also stocked
his foreign-policy team with neoconservatives, many of whom were Jewish and
steadfast Israel supporters. The American Israel Public Affairs Committee,
Israel’s powerful lobbying group in Washington, had been a Democratic
institution since its inception in 1963; in 1982, the organization named its
first Republican leader.
After the
Sept. 11 attacks, the ties grew stronger. President George W. Bush was a
born-again evangelical himself and had also put neoconservatives into important
positions in his administration. When the United States began its global war on
terror, Israel — then in the midst of the second intifada — became a natural
ally in the fight against radical Islam. The two countries’ causes were seen as
effectively intertwined. In 2006, John Hagee, the megachurch pastor who founded
the influential group Christians United for Israel, called the Book of Genesis
“God’s foreign-policy statement.”
‘Really
What They Should Do Is Become Christians’
But
throughout, strains of skepticism toward Israel persisted on the right,
animated sometimes by an “America first” foreign policy, sometimes by outright
antisemitism — and sometimes by a mix of the two.
In 1988,
the influential conservative political philosopher Russell Kirk accused the
neoconservatives of mistaking Tel Aviv for the capital of the United States.
During the 1990s, the neo-isolationist Pat Buchanan, a two-time Republican
presidential candidate, referred to Capitol Hill as “Israel-occupied territory”
and blamed “the Israeli Defense Ministry and its amen corner in the United
States” for dragging the United States into the first gulf war. Significantly,
both men were Catholics who did not share the dispensationalist view of
modern-day Israel.
Years
later, during the 2016 presidential election, similarly nativist, anti-Israel
sentiments spread across the internet, inspired in part by Trump’s “America
First” campaign — even as the future president cast himself as a “lifelong
supporter” of Israel. At the time, the anti-Israel contingent seemed like a
marginal force within the party, largely confined to a resurgent white
nationalist movement. In fact, these were just the first tremors of a much
broader realignment motivated by both ideology and religion.
“Part of
the power of the moment is that the politics are driving this just as much as
the theology,” says Daniel Hummel, a historian of U.S. religion at the Lumen
Center, a Christian research institute, and the author of “The Rise and Fall of
Dispensationalism: How the Evangelical Battle Over the End Times Shaped a
Nation.” “There are political consequences to the conversation.”
Evangelical
Christians remain a powerful voting bloc for the Republican Party. White
evangelicals make up more than 20 percent of the total electorate, and Trump
won about 80 percent of their votes in 2024. And for the moment, they remain
overwhelmingly pro-Israel.
Israel is
trying to keep things that way, spending millions of dollars on a
public-relations campaign targeting U.S. churches. Older evangelicals,
meanwhile, are trying to shore up the base, reminding Christians that a person
doesn’t have to subscribe to a specific end-times scenario to be a Zionist.
“Evangelicals support Israel because they love God, cherish their country and
believe faith and freedom are inseparable,” Ralph Reed, the founder and
chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, wrote recently in The Wall Street
Journal. “Israel, like the U.S., is a beacon for those timeless and, one hopes,
eternal values.”
As the
head of the Christian Coalition, founded by Pat Robertson, in the 1990s, Reed
once wielded enormous influence among Christian voters. But today, the
religious right’s political power is far more diffuse. The towering figures who
once served as its theological and political gatekeepers, shaping American
Christian thought about both the Bible and the ballot, are largely gone. They
have been replaced by a wide range of online figures like the Texas pastor Joel
Webbon, who advocates a breaking of geopolitical ties between America and
Israel and has written on X that Jews are “generally marked by subversion,
deceit, and greed.”
A growing
number of Christians are turning away from premillennial Dispensationalism and
toward other theological frameworks that see, at most, a diminished role for
Israel and the Jewish people in God’s plan for redemption. Many believe that
God abrogated his covenant with Abraham when the Jews rejected the Gospel of
Jesus and that the church replaced ancient Israel as the vessel of God’s will.
Some of
these Christians are known as “postmillennialists.” Premillennialists believe
that the second coming will occur before the 1,000-year reign of peace referred
to in the Book of Revelation as the millennium. Postmillennialists believe that
Christ will return after the millennium, and that it’s their duty to prepare
for this moment by making the earth fit for him. Many postmillennialists don’t
see Judaism and Christianity as complementary, but as at odds with each other.
“They are
much more likely to think that Jews are in a state of theological
incompleteness and really what they should do is become Christians sooner
rather than later,” said Samuel Goldman, an associate professor at the
University of Florida and the author of “God’s Country: Christian Zionism in
America.”
This is
by no means a new framework. It was the default position throughout most of
Christianity, and it laid the foundation for the church’s long history of
persecuting Jews, justifying their expulsion from Christian societies and
playing into countless anti-Jewish conspiracy theories. “The Jews are suffering
and stateless because Christ came to them first and they rejected him,” said
Mark Tooley, a lifelong member of the United Methodist Church and the president
of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, describing the theology.
A new
cohort of religious leaders and thinkers are now repurposing this theology for
our contemporary politics, arguing that America should embrace Christianity as
its national religion. They are, in a sense, the Protestant answer to
liberalism’s Catholic critics — like Sohrab Ahmari and Adrian Vermeule — who
have gained prominence during the Trump era. They include Stephen Wolfe, the
author of “The Case for Christian Nationalism,” and Doug Wilson, a
self-described Christian nationalist pastor in Idaho who recently opened a
branch of his church on Capitol Hill — and counts Secretary of Defense Pete
Hegseth among his admirers. “I am no kind of Zionist,” Wilson has written.
Carlson,
a Protestant, is also tapping into this new, post-Dispensationalist energy to
buttress his own anti-Israel views. One of the repeat guests on his podcast,
the country singer John Rich, has amplified an unfounded conspiracy theory that
it was a Jewish family, the Rothschilds, who underwrote the publication of the
first Bibles with study notes that advanced the theology of Dispensationalism.
Carlson’s
viral interview last summer with Ted Cruz, during which he pressed the
evangelical senator to offer a religious defense of his support for Israel, did
not happen in a historical vacuum. “Tucker is not leading this theological
re-evaluation of Israel,” Hummel says. “He’s just participating in it and
capitalizing on it.”
The Gaza
Generation
What we
are witnessing on the right is, as much as anything, a demographic shift, as a
new generation of Christians comes of age, both theologically and politically.
“There
is, and really has been for at least 20 years, a revolt of younger, more
intellectual American Christians against the old-American style of evangelical
Protestantism that became so familiar in the 1980s and ’90s,” Goldman said.
“They are much less likely to see the modern state of Israel as the fulfillment
of the various biblical prophecies and promises.”
They are
also less likely to see support for Israel as either a moral or strategic
imperative. These are Christians who grew up in the shadow of America’s
protracted involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, and at a historical remove from
the horror of the Holocaust, which helped convince many older American
Christians of the need for a Jewish homeland. Today’s young right-wing
Christians complain that America is facing too many urgent crises at home —
like the cost of living and illegal immigration — to justify sending billions
of dollars a year to Israel. Over the past two-plus years, their social media
feeds have been flooded with graphic images from Gaza — and no shortage of
nationalist, nativist and antisemitic commentary.
The
Democrats are engaged in their own civil war over America’s policies toward
Israel. While the Republicans have been the more staunchly pro-Israel party in
the modern political era, the Democratic establishment has also been broadly
aligned with Israel. But it, too, is now finding itself under increasing
pressure from the younger wing of the party. In recent months, congressional
Democrats have divided over whether to block arms transfers to Israel, whether
to accept money from the American Israel Public Affairs Committee and whether
to recognize a Palestinian state. And the cracks are spreading. A number of
progressive Democratic politicians are centering criticism of Israel in their
primary challenges against pro-Israel incumbents.
Zohran
Mamdani, New York’s first Muslim mayor and an outspoken critic of Israel, has
little in common with Fuentes, a white nationalist. Mamdani speaks a language
of pluralism, human rights and social justice; Fuentes rails against
immigration and women’s rights, and he has talked about the need to preserve
America’s “white demographic core.” But both came of age in the years after the
war on terror and have emerged into the political spotlight at a time when the
old pieties in American politics about Israel are eroding.
“People
tend to think of generational politics in a narrow way, as the arrival of a new
voice who speaks to his generation in a different vocabulary,” Tanenhaus said.
“But there’s another kind of generational politics, which is formed by shared
experiences that can cut across ideological boundaries. This is the Gaza
generation.”
Trump has
shown no signs of turning against Israel, and there is still a powerful
pro-Israel faction within the G.O.P. Four decades of consistent support won’t
go quietly. But the party’s post-Trump future is up for grabs, and it’s easy to
imagine the fight over Israel becoming a primary battleground in the larger war
for the party. Will the isolationists or the interventionists win out? How much
influence will Christian nationalists have? Will antisemites be allowed inside
the tent — and if not, who will have the authority to draw the boundaries that
keep them out?
Charlie
Kirk saw it all coming. Last summer, with both anti-Zionism and antisemitism
rising among young conservative activists, he convened a group of Turning Point
USA chapter leaders from across the country for a focus group on Israel. “I’m
trying to find this new path,” he said of his effort to reconcile hard-right
America First nationalism with Zionism. “I love Israel, I’ve visited there, my
wife and I had the best experiences ever. I saw where Jesus rose from the dead
and he walked on water. But also, I’m an American, and I represent a generation
that can’t afford anything. And we are flooded with illegals, and no one speaks
English.”
Kirk
never got to see this effort through. Within days of his death in September, a
bitter fight had broken out on the online right over whether he had been in the
process of turning against the Jewish state — complete with an unfounded
conspiracy theory that the Mossad was behind his assassination.
Source
photographs for illustration above: Sipa/Alamy; Nicholas Kamm/AFP, via Getty
Images; Mega/Getty Images; Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Alex Wroblewski/AFP, via
Getty Images; David Dee Delgado/Getty Images.
Jonathan
Mahler, a staff writer for The New York Times Magazine, has been writing for
the magazine since 2001.


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