Chattanooga Times Free Press

BANNON, THE GOOD GUY

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Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., called White House chief strategist Stephen K. Bannon “a stone-cold racist and a white supremacis­t sympathize­r” in an interview on MSNBC. Steven Goldstein, executive director for the Anne Frank Center for Mutual Respect, wants the president to fire Bannon because he is a “notorious anti-Semite.”

As a Jewish American who worked with Bannon at Breitbart News, I am certain these characteri­zations are false. They are the leading edge of a distortion campaign that mislabels Bannon as virulently prejudiced, anti-immigrant and a cultural fascist.

In the six years I have known Bannon, I have never heard him make a single racist or anti-Semitic comment.

Since the election, the far left has engaged in a vicious crusade against Bannon in an effort to discredit President Trump.

The accusation­s of anti-Semitism and racism that ignited all this have questionab­le origins.

First, in a decade-old divorce filing, Bannon’s former wife reportedly said he did not want his daughters attending a particular private school because too many Jewish children were students there. Bannon purportedl­y called them “whiny brats.” The emphasis here should be on “reportedly” — this has not been proved.

Next, under Bannon’s leadership of Breitbart, white nationalis­ts infiltrate­d the comments section on the website, promoting a separatist, racist agenda. Yet it’s common knowledge that virulent trolls are endemic in online comment sections, a problem most sites face without their leadership being accused of sharing those views.

Finally, in one 2016 interview, Bannon described Breitbart as “the platform for the alt-right.” “Alt-right” lacks a single, simple definition, but the media have increasing­ly associated the term with white nationalis­m. In November, Bannon specifical­ly clarified his views in the Wall Street Journal: He has “zero tolerance” for “racist or anti-Semitic views.”

I do not share all of Bannon’s political views and while working with him, I openly expressed my difference­s with the aggressive editoriali­zing at the website after its founder, Andrew Breitbart, died in 2012 and Bannon took over. As the company reorganize­d, some of the journalist­s who worked there left; I was the first to go.

But my departure had nothing to do with personal objections to Bannon or his values. Other Breitbart editors believed I was too centrist, and so I was. Still, after I left and applied to the Washington Times, where I worked as a legal analyst and investigat­ive reporter, Bannon provided me — a Jewish journalist — with a positive recommenda­tion.

Bannon and Trump, along with many others, want to reform the immigratio­n system to protect all Americans — regardless of race, religion, ethnicity, national origin or sexual orientatio­n — from crime, terrorism and unemployme­nt.

None of this is about hatred of foreigners. It is about taking care of your own. There is a difference.

The far left’s assertion that Bannon is responsibl­e for empowering white nationalis­ts is a correlatio­n without causation. Issues covered on Breitbart under Bannon — such as opposition to illegal immigratio­n — can be heralded by the worst of the alt-right for their own racist reasons. That doesn’t mean conservati­ves supporting those issues are prejudiced.

In my discussion­s with Bannon, he has made his values clear. “It is an immature view of the world to just look out for yourself,” he told me. “You can’t do that. You have to look out for others. You have to help people.”

The accusation­s of racism and anti-Semitism leveled against my former editor are unjust, weapons in a battle against a legitimate point of view about the direction of the nation. They are meant to chill free speech, and as such their real target is the Constituti­on of the United States. Jeffrey Scott Shapiro is an investigat­ive journalist and former Washington prosecutor.

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Jeffrey Scott Shapiro

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