ANTISEMITISM EXPLODES IN THE GOP: SKYROCKETING AT EPIC LEVELS AS NATIONALISM UNLEASHES A HATEFUL TSUNAMI
- Bruce News MA Ed.
- 1 day ago
- 4 min read

Bruce News MA Ed.
Writer / CEO
Notable Crossovers from the GOP and its pundits to become openly Anti Semitic / Anti Israel.
Megyn Kelly - "I don't think those four service members died for the United States. I think they died for Iran or for Israel".
Nick Fuentes: Far-right streamer and white nationalist leader of the “Groyper” movement. Openly praises Hitler, promotes Holocaust denial, claims “organized Jewry” undermines American unity, and pushes antisemitic conspiracy theories. Interviewed amicably by Tucker Carlson in October 2025, where he advanced ideas that Jews are disloyal or a force against national cohesion. Gaining traction with segments of young MAGA supporters.
Candace Owens: Former Daily Wire host and popular conservative podcaster. Ousted in 2024 over antisemitic statements; has since doubled down with claims that AIPAC orchestrated JFK’s assassination, called Judaism a “pedophile-centric religion” involving “child sacrifice,” and accused Jewish groups of bribery and global control. Praised by Fuentes as being in a “full-fledged war against the Jews.” Strongly anti-Israel and aligns with isolationist critiques.
Tucker Carlson: Leading conservative podcaster and former Fox News host. Hosted Fuentes in a lengthy, relatively friendly interview (disagreeing only mildly on explicit antisemitism while aligning on reducing U.S. support for Israel). Repeatedly criticizes Israeli influence on U.S. policy, called Netanyahu “evil and destructive,” described the Gaza war as a “land grab,” and has been accused by Jewish conservatives and GOP figures of stoking antisemitism through conspiracy-adjacent rhetoric and platforming extremists.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA): Has a documented history of antisemitic-adjacent posts (e.g., “Jewish space lasers” causing wildfires, Rothschild conspiracies, liking videos about Zionist “supremacists”). In 2025, broke sharply from GOP orthodoxy by calling Israel’s actions in Gaza a “genocide,” opposing certain pro-Israel legislation, and criticizing fellow Republicans for “slavish loyalty” to Israel. Viewed by critics as shifting toward anti-Israel nationalism.
Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY): Consistent isolationist who opposes U.S. aid to Israel, votes against anti-BDS measures, and has publicly pitted “Zionism” against “patriotism.” Accused of enabling antisemitic tropes through his America First foreign-policy critiques, though he frames it strictly as opposition to foreign entanglements and has denied antisemitism.
These figures represent a vocal minority within the broader conservative movement, which remains largely pro-Israel. However, multiple 2025–2026 reports (from The New York Times, Politico, NPR, and others) highlight growing concern over their influence, especially online and among younger Republicans, where surveys show rising antisemitic or anti-Israel views in some factions. Mainstream GOP leaders (e.g., Sens. Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham) have condemned the most extreme elements, while others defend the right to “America First” skepticism of foreign aid. The trend is often linked to nationalism, social media amplification, and internal party debates over isolationism versus traditional alliances.
In a chilling betrayal of its own ideals, the Republican Party is witnessing an unprecedented surge of antisemitism that experts warn is reshaping conservatism from within. What was once confined to the fringes has now burst into mainstream conservative spaces, fueled by a toxic blend of radical nationalism, unchecked online extremism, and a dangerous ideological pivot. The result? A party increasingly defined not by unity or principle, but by a rising tide of hatred that has younger conservatives sounding the alarm like never before.
At the heart of this explosion is the conservative movement’s sharp turn toward aggressive nationalism and the “America First” doctrine. Once rooted in universal American values, segments of the right now frame national identity through a narrow ethnic and racial lens—elevating a white Christian “heritage America” while casting Jewish Americans as perpetual outsiders. This shift has opened the floodgates for open antisemitism, transforming it from a whispered taboo into an acceptable talking point.
Far-right influencers have seized the moment, normalizing venomous conspiracy theories on mainstream platforms. Figures like Nick Fuentes openly rail against “organized Jewry” as an existential threat to American unity, their messages amplified through popular podcasts that reach millions. What was once the domain of anonymous message boards is now broadcast with impunity, eroding the guardrails that once kept extremism at bay.
The traditional pillars of Republican support are fracturing as well. The historic bond between the GOP and Evangelical Christians—who have long championed strong support for Israel—is crumbling under the weight of rising influence from conservative Catholic circles and a growing isolationist foreign policy. Meanwhile, social media algorithms on platforms like X reward raw controversy, stripping away traditional gatekeepers and propelling antisemitic narratives into viral stardom overnight.
Beneath it all lies a darker human impulse: scapegoating born of status threat. Lower socioeconomic, nationalist-leaning groups, feeling squeezed by immigration, globalization, and cultural change, increasingly channel their frustrations toward Jewish people as the alleged architects of their decline. Right-wing media and activist voices have supercharged this with “anti-establishment” rhetoric that mirrors left-wing tropes—portraying Jews as a shadowy global elite—while cleverly rebranding it as pure “America First” patriotism.
Yet the GOP’s response reveals a glaring hypocrisy. While the party loudly condemns antisemitism on the political left, it has largely ignored or shielded these rising extremist currents on its own side, creating a political blind spot that allows the cancer to spread unchecked.
The stakes could not be higher. As antisemitism skyrockets at epic levels within Republican ranks, the party risks not only alienating its principled base but forfeiting its moral authority entirely. Younger conservatives, watching this nightmare unfold in real time, are left wondering if the movement they once believed in still stands for anything—or if it has already surrendered to the very darkness it claims to oppose. The warning bells are deafening. The question now is whether anyone in the GOP will have the courage to answer them before it’s too late.
As history has repeated hundreds of times, when the economy tanks blame the Jews.
Pray, Vote and be Active — Bruce
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