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Opinion

The American far right seethes with deep antisemitism

A new book about the storming of Capitol Hill in 2021 provides remarkable reporting of the attitude to Jews in a movement that can genuinely best be described as fascistic

September 1, 2022 13:28
Capitol
3 min read

Sometimes it helps to be reminded of even the most basic things. This summer, there came just such a reminder, and it came from the contents of my holiday suitcase.

For a two-week break in France, I decided to emulate Gordon Brown who, when finally persuaded to take time off work, would pack an entire suitcase full of books. I didn’t go that far, but I did have high hopes that I could use my fortnight in the sun to reduce the tottering pile on the bedside table. Into the bag went a couple of le Carré’s; Glass Pearls, a rediscovered gem of a novel by the legendary émigré filmmaker Emeric Pressburger which I can strongly recommend; and a brand new book, The Storm is Here, by the New Yorker journalist, Luke Mogelson.

It’s a remarkable book, a work of close-up, eye-witness reporting by a distinguished war correspondent. Except this is no despatch from a far-flung, unfamiliar battlefield. It is an account of the undeclared civil war that now grips America and which erupted into full view with the storming of Capitol Hill on 6 January 2021. Mogelson was there that day, embedded among the far right militants and self-styled “patriots” that battered down the doors, assaulted police officers and rampaged through the halls of the US Congress, determined to overturn a democratic election and keep Donald Trump in power against the expressed wishes of the people.

Mogelson was there because he had been with that same movement for the preceding year or more, spending hour after hour among the Trump-worshipping right during the pitched battles — the armed storming of the state capitol in Michigan, for example — that, in retrospect, were dress rehearsals for, and warnings of, 6 January. He listened to the speeches they made, the slogans they chanted. He heard what they said to him and overheard what they said to each other when they were at their most unguarded.

Topics:

USA