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Miriam Shaviv

ByMiriam Shaviv, Miriam Shaviv

Opinion

Miriam Shaviv: All control is now remote

The real issue for the American Jewish community is not whether Kushner is good or bad for the Jews. It’s that the Jewish establishment has lost control of its relationship with the administration.

January 12, 2017 12:27
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2 min read

This week, American president-elect Donald Trump named his Jewish son-in-law as a senior adviser. He is set to become the second most powerful Jew in the United States, following only his wife, Ivanka. Together, this power couple has the ear of the president, and almost unprecedented influence.

Many right-wing Jews are thrilled. Kushner attended a Jewish day school and is Sabbath-observant, while Ivanka converted Orthodox. They hope that Kushner can be a positive bridge between the Jewish community and Trump, pointing to the fact that he arranged for Trump to speak to Aipac during the primaries. Similarly, they believe Kushner can push Trump to take a more pro-Israel line than his predecessor. Signs of this already abound, with Trump’s promise to move the American embassy to Jerusalem, and his appointment of his pro-settlement bankruptcy lawyer, David Friedman, as the next American ambassador to Israel.

The left-wing is nervous. Not only did Kushner not prevent the appointment of the hate-mongering Steve Bannon as a senior counsellor, the press is full of stories of a “bromance” between them. When Trump last summer tweeted a graphic calling Hillary, “the most corrupt candidate ever” on top of wads of cash and a Star of David — playing on classically antisemitic associations between Jews and money — Kushner defended him in print.

It may turn out that Trump is moulding Kushner in his image, rather than the other way round. And there are serious risks, too, in having such a prominent Jew associated so closely with this volatile, inexperienced president — particularly if (when) he fails.