Representative Keith Ellison of Minnesota is a politician in a hurry. A decade ago be became the first Muslim ever elected to Congress. Now he’s running for the chairmanship of the Democratic National Committee. That would make him the first Muslim to win a position in America’s national political leadership.
J.J. Goldberg says this is the first election in which the losing side repudiated not just the winning candidate, but his voters. What’s animating the left’s unusual outrage?
Our advocacy organizations have been bungling American Jewish issues for decades. We can’t afford that anymore, J.J. Goldberg writes.
Scanning the landscape after the votes were cast, Hillary Clinton and the Democrats could find any number of reasons to be disappointed.
Waking up in America on November 9 felt a bit like stumbling into the middle of a science fiction movie. Everything was askew, out of place, upside down. All the familiar signposts of normality were wrong.
If you’re looking to apportion some blame, look no further than these three parties, J.J. Goldberg says.
Instead of using Trumpism as a club to beat up Republicans, why not take the broad revulsion he evokes as an opportunity to reach out, combat gridlock and polarization?
A home run by a Cleveland Indians slugger might point to the World Series outcome. What he did afterwards might point to American Jewry’s future.
The thing that’s most upsetting about the latest WikiLeaks disclosures and the larger Clinton email scandal is the rank dishonesty and hypocrisy so painfully on display.
Even if Clinton wins the presidency, DC will remain paralyzed. A little-known GOP scheme to keep the House red shattered the party’s moderate wing and shut Republican Jews out of Congress.