The Jewish Chronicle

Identity politics is now a Red pursuit, too

- BY DOMINIC GREEN

▶ ANNA PAULINA Luna is a 33-yearold Congresswo­man from Florida. She is the first Mexican American to represent a Florida district. To win her seat, which is centered on the city of St. Petersburg on Florida’s west coast, Luna ran against Eric Lynn. He is a moderate Democrat. He served in the Department of Defence under Barack Obama. He is Jewish. He lost.

In November, when Luna was running for her House seat, she told the Jewish Insider website that her father had raised her as a Messianic Jew, which is to say, a Christian, and that she was “also a small fraction Ashkenazi”.

Last week, the Washington Post reported that Luna’s paternal grandfathe­r had been conscripte­d into the Wehrmacht in the Second World War, and that when he left Germany in 1954 for Canada, his immigratio­n papers describe him as a Catholic.

Cue jokes about putting the Nazi into Ashkenazi. Cue also Luna’s insistence that the Post’s report, rather than being a rare instance of actual journalism, was a hit job because a “conservati­ve minority” had dared to speak out against “leftist control”. You have to admire Luna’s display of what her grandfathe­r might, albeit in a whisper, have called chutzpah.

Luna and her team denied everything, of course. The really dangerous claim in the Post’s report was that Luna, who was endorsed by Marjorie Taylor ‘Rothschild space laser’ Greene, had once registered as a Democrat. You can recover from confusing your ancestry in today’s Republican Party. You can, like Greene, recover your seat on House committees despite the ‘Rothschild space laser’ stuff. But you cannot recover from once having once been a Democrat.

Ron DeSantis, the Florida governor who is tipped as a possible Republican nominee for president in 2024, endorsed Luna’s run. So did Donald Trump, who has sort-of declared himself as a candidate in 2024, hence him calling DeSantis “Ron DeSanctimo­nious”. But the Jewish organisati­ons in Luna’s district kept their distance from her campaign.

The Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) did not endorse Luna. Greene endorsed her, and the RJC wants to expel Greene from Congress. AIPAC did not endorse Luna, either, though some of its local activists threw her a fundraiser. More importantl­y, AIPAC’s recently created United Democracy Project, which has poured money into the campaigns of pro-Israel candidates, some of them on the nutty right of the Republican Party, also stayed out.

The materials of family history are notoriousl­y flexible in the telling, and identity politics incentiviz­es further misreprese­ntation. Consider Senator Elizabeth Warren, whose small fraction of Native American ancestry shrank to infinitesi­mal fractionho­od under examinatio­n. Modern American politics, which apply the morality of the Salem witch trials to the mob-mentality of WWE wrestling, rewards extravagan­t and cynical claims, and attracts the kind of people willing to make them with the appearance of conviction.

The Luna case shows that identity politics now cuts both ways in America. The Republican­s are flipping the Democrats’ script. Florida has growing Latin and Jewish population­s, and it’s trending ever rightwards. So Luna emphasized her Mexican ancestry and her Ashkenazi “fraction”.

The Luna case follows the fiasco of George Santos, another first-time MAGA Congressio­nal rep who claims of Jewish ancestry dissolved under examinatio­n. Santos’ backstory seems to include entire passages of fiction, as well as a complex financial history. The debate about Luna’s backstory, so far at least, is less extreme and more typical.

Luna’s story seems closer to that of her fellow Floridian Julia Salazar. In 2018, Salazar ran for the New York State Senate. She “identifies” as Jewish, and claimed some Sephardic ancestry on her father’s side. Her brothers said they hadn’t heard anything about it, just as Luna’s extended family disputed her story about her father’s Messianic Judaism and Ashkenazi fraction. But Salazar’s mother backed up her daughter’s story, just as Luna’s mother backed hers.

Meanwhile in reality, an American Jewish Committee survey reported this week that 40% of Jewish Americans feel less secure in 2022 than they did in 2021, when 30% felt less secure than they had in 2020. Only 22% approve of Congress’s response. These fractions, mostly Ashkenazi, are much more significan­t.

The Jewish principle of compassion was key in the decision

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Chutzpah: Anna Paulina Luna
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Chutzpah: Anna Paulina Luna
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