In what is surely the most shameful decision of her current term as speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi has decided that the time has come for the House of Representatives to rebuke Rep. Ilhan Omar for things she didn't actually say and ideas she didn't actually express. In the process, Pelosi and other Democrats are helping propagate a series of misconceptions about anti-Semitism, Israel, and American political debate.
I'm going to try to bring some clarity to this issue, understanding how difficult it can be whenever we discuss anything that touches on Israel.
To be clear, I do this as someone who was raised in an intensely Zionist family with a long history of devotion and sacrifice for Israel, but who also, like many American Jews, has become increasingly dismayed not only by developments in Israel but by how we talk about it here in America.
In the latest round of controversy, Omar said in a town hall, regarding U.S. policy toward Israel, "I want to talk about the political influence in this country that says it is okay for people to push for allegiance to a foreign country." This comment was roundly condemned by members of Congress and many others for being anti-Semitic. Rep. Eliot Engel called her statement "a vile anti-Semitic slur" and accused her of "call1/8ing3/8 into question the loyalty of fellow American citizens."
Then Pelosi announced that the House will be voting on a resolution which, while not mentioning Omar by name, is clearly meant as a condemnation of her. It contains multiple "whereas" statements about the danger of accusing Jews of "dual loyalty."
So let's talk about this idea of "dual loyalty" and how it does and doesn't relate to what Omar has said. For many years, Jews were routinely accused of having dual loyalty, to both the United States and Israel, as a way of questioning whether they were truly American and could be trusted to do things like serve in sensitive national security positions.
That charge was anti-Semitic, because it was used to allege that every Jew was suspect, no matter what they thought about Israel, and that they could not be fully American because they were assumed to have too much affection for another country. It wasn't about the particulars of U.S. policy or what Jews at the time were advocating, it was about who they (allegedly) were, their identity.
Now back to Omar. Here's the truth: The whole purpose of the Democrats' resolution is to enforce dual loyalty not among Jews, but among members of Congress, to make sure that criticism of Israel is punished in the most visible way possible. This, of course, includes Ilhan Omar. As it happens, this punishment of criticism of Israel is exactly what she was complaining about, and has on multiple occasions. The fact that no one seems to acknowledge that this is her complaint shows how spectacularly disingenuous Omar's critics are being.