Podcast: Noah Rothman on Kamala Harris's Views of Israel and the Middle East

What does the newly minted Democratic candidate for president think about the Jewish state?

Vice President Kamala Harris on June 17, 2024 in Washington, DC before the screening of a documentary detailing the sexual violence perpetrated during the October 7th attack by Hamas. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images.

Vice President Kamala Harris on June 17, 2024 in Washington, DC before the screening of a documentary detailing the sexual violence perpetrated during the October 7th attack by Hamas. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images.

Observation
July 26 2024
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A weekly podcast, produced in partnership with the Tikvah Fund, offering up the best thinking on Jewish thought and culture.

Podcast: Kamala Harris

 

Suddenly, Vice-President Kamala Harris is the Democratic party’s candidate for president. She’s been in the public eye for much less time than Joe Biden or Donald Trump, and much less is known about her views on many subjects—including on the U.S.-Israel relationship or America’s posture in the Middle East.

For instance, as Israel’s war in Gaza ramped up earlier this year, Harris became an outspoken critic of it, and a champion of a ceasefire arrangement between Israel and Hamas on the grounds of humanitarian concern for Palestinian civilians. But it’s possible that these attitudes were a product of her role in the Biden administration, that she was assigned the role of bad cop to the president’s good cop.

So what does Harris really think about the subject? What role might her Jewish family members play in her views? How does she understand the politics of the U.S.-Israel relationship? To answer those questions, the host Jonathan Silver speaks here with Noah Rothman, a senior writer at National Review and the author of a recent essay there called “The Left Thinks It’s Getting an Anti-Israel Radical in Kamala Harris.” Together, the two also survey the wide coalition of the Democratic party, its elected officials, its voting base, its NGOs, and its operatives, and try to understand the pressures, the points of leverage, the incentives, and the political vulnerabilities to avoid on questions related to Israel.

More about: Kamala Harris, new-registrations, Politics & Current Affairs