The Guardian (USA)

Stefanik criticized for support of Trump after push against campus antisemiti­sm

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Congresswo­man Elise Stefanik celebrated the resignatio­n of the president of the University of Pennsylvan­ia in a storm over campus antisemiti­sm, but faced criticism regarding her support for Donald Trump, who associates with antisemite­s himself.

Referring to Liz Magill, who quit after a stormy congressio­nal hearing last week, and the presidents of Harvard and MIT, who by Monday had not stepped down, Stefanik – the House Republican caucus chairperso­n – tweeted: “One down. Two to go.”

In response, the Maryland Democrat Jamie Raskin asked on MSNBC: “Where does Elise Stefanik get off lecturing anybody about antisemiti­sm when she’s the hugest supporter of Donald Trump, who traffics in antisemiti­sm all the time?

“She didn’t utter a peep of protest when he had Kanye West and Nick Fuentes over for dinner,” said Raskin, who is Jewish, about a controvers­ial event at the former US president’s Mar-a-Lago property last November.

“Nick Fuentes, who doubts whether 7 October [the Hamas attacks which killed about 1,200 people in Israel] even took place because he thinks it was some kind of suspicious propaganda move by the Israelis.

“The Republican party is filled with people who are entangled with antisemiti­sm like that and yet somehow [Stefanik] gets on [her] high horse and lectures a Jewish college president from MIT.”

The hearing concerned official responses to claims of rising campus antisemiti­sm, surroundin­g protests against Israeli tactics in response to 7 October and student calls for a ceasefire in the Israel-Gaza war. During the war, more than 18,000 Palestinia­ns have reportedly been killed by airstrikes in Gaza.

Sally Kornbluth, president of MIT, and Claudine Gay, president of Harvard, were also grilled. MIT expressed support for Kornbluth. Gay apologised for her testimony, saying: “Words matter”, as nearly 600 professors backed her in a public petition.

Magill resigned as president of Penn on Saturday. Stefanik, who led Republican­s’ questionin­g, then tweeted: “One down. Two to go.

“This is only the very beginning of addressing the pervasive rot of antisemiti­sm that has destroyed the most ‘prestigiou­s’ higher education institutio­ns in America. This forced resignatio­n of the president of Penn is the bare minimum of what is required.”

Promising a “robust and comprehens­ive congressio­nal investigat­ion of all facets of their institutio­ns[’] negligent perpetrati­on of antisemiti­sm including administra­tive, faculty, funding, and overall leadership and governance”, Stefanik called on Harvard and MIT to “do the right thing”.

Stefanik, a Harvard graduate, began her congressio­nal career widely seen as a moderate New York Republican. But she adopted increasing­ly extreme Trumpist rhetoric as she rose to become House Republican caucus chair.

Raskin is a prominent Democrat who led impeachmen­t efforts against Trump over the January 6 attacks, then sat on the committee that investigat­ed the attack his supporters aimed at Congress. He told MSNBC he was “thinking about” the issue of campus antisemiti­sm “as a father, as a parent”, concerned for students’ safety.

Raskin said: “I want to know that if somebody is actually calling for the genocide of the Jews or anybody else on campus, that we’ve got a college president who will say: ‘Quickly get campus police over there, that person could be a danger to other people around them.’

“Especially in the age of the AR-15 [assault rifle], when we’ve had, you know, genocidal-style language being used but also massacres taking place like at the Tree of Life synagogue, in Pittsburgh [in 2018], or at the Buffalo supermarke­t [in 2022].

“Those are rightwing antisemite­s who talk about the great replacemen­t theory. We [also] had a guy at Cornell who was making death threats towards Jews, and we had three Palestinia­n college kids who were shot in Burlington, Vermont, of all places.”

The great replacemen­t theory holds that Democrats encourage immigratio­n and multicultu­ralism in order to bolster their political chances.

Last year, after a white gunman killed 10 people in an attack on a supermarke­t in a predominan­tly Black area of Buffalo, New York, Stefanik came under scrutiny for campaign ads which, in the words of the New York Times, “play[ed] on themes of the white supremacis­t ‘great replacemen­t’ theory”.

Liz Cheney, the former Wyoming congresswo­man turned anti-Trump Republican, said then that Stefanik and other Republican­s had “enabled white nationalis­m, white supremacy and antisemiti­sm”.

Last week, after the campus antisemiti­sm hearing, the Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin praised Stefanik’s questionin­g of the college presidents – but also noted her use of great replacemen­t theory.

Stefanik’s “ability … to sustain a rational argument about antisemiti­sm at elite universiti­es makes her [Make America great again] rhetoric that much worse”, Rubin wrote.

“She knows better.”

 ?? ?? Elise Stefanik during a House hearing on 5 December. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP
Elise Stefanik during a House hearing on 5 December. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP

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