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Analysis

Trump is ‘worse than expected’

Prominent Jewish Republicans are struggling to reach any accommodation with the president that some are calling 'an obnoxious bully'

March 21, 2017 11:45
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2 min read

Ronald Reagan famously called it the 11th commandment: “Thou shall not speak ill of any fellow Republican.” But, for the Jewish conservatives who were at the heart of the “Never Trump” movement – those Republicans who vowed not to support their party’s candidate in last November’s election – it was a commandment they could not keep.

Two months after Donald Trump took the oath of office, few are showing signs of second thoughts.

Perhaps the most high-profile and vociferous of the Republican Jewish rebels last year was Bill Kristol, the son of Irving Kristol, the so-called “Godfather of neoconservatism”. After serving as then vice president Dan Quayle’s chief of staff, Mr Kristol went on to found and edit The Weekly Standard, America’s leading conservative magazine. The driving-force behind the bid to persuade a third-party conservative to enter the race against Mr Trump and Hillary Clinton, Mr Kristol was famously labelled a “renegade Jew” by Breitbart News, the website formerly run by Steve Bannon, the president’s chief strategist.

Barely 48 hours after Mr Trump’s inauguration, Mr Kristol tweeted simply: “Je ne regrette rien.” That may be his gentlest comment thus far on the 45th president. With the exception of the nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, Mr Kristol suggested one month into Mr Trump’s tenure at the White House, “it’s worse than I expected”. His dislike of the president reflects the tenor of the criticisms levelled by other Jewish conservatives over the past year. During the election campaign, it was Mr Trump’s populism and his seeming disrespect for the constitution and the rule of law, rather than worries about his electability, which was at the heart of their concerns.

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