Fighting antisemitism? Stefanik attacks America’s diversity| Inquirer
 
 
 
 
 
 

Fighting antisemitism? Stefanik was attacking America’s diversity

/ 05:00 PM December 13, 2023

If you haven’t realized it yet, that congressional hearing last week that continues to make news wasn’t about solving rising antisemitism in America in the shadows of the Israel/Hamas war.

That was the given pretext for the hearing, but it really served as a platform for an outright attack by right-wing MAGA-types on the thing they believe has destroyed higher ed – and all of American society – the last 30 years.

What would that be?

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Diversity, of course, and the undoing of racial discrimination in the spirit of the Civil Rights Act.

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Filipino Americans have benefited from this and should be alarmed by what happened in Washington.

With that single word, “diversity,” comes all that detractors believe has crippled our country starting with our colleges and universities.  It includes everything from admissions, to hiring, and extends to a curriculum that has seen the emergence of race, gender and equity studies. It serves to make everyone more aware of issues heretofore ignored in society in general.

What better way to bring about its reversal but in a high-profile congressional hearing attacking three elite university presidents?

The main instigator was fourth-ranking Republican, Rep. Elise Stefanik of New York, a Donald Trump acolyte, and herself an Ivy League-educated Marjorie Taylor Green wannabe.

‘Show business for ugly people’

Stefanik is a Trump enabler who voted to invalidate the 2020 election and has maintained the “Big Lie” on election fraud.

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That puts her low on any sane person’s credibility scale – unless you’re Donald Trump.

At the hearing, Stefanik in mini-authoritarian mode, was given extra time by fellow Republicans who yielded to her so she could wail at the college presidents demanding they give yes/no answers on complex matters of free speech and discrimination. It was textbook political outrage as performance and a good example of why politics is sometimes called “show business for ugly people.”

Still, it’s hard to believe that elite college presidents, who themselves oversee sometimes treacherous academic office politics, could have been taken by surprise. Surely, they’ve seen Congressional hearings run by MAGA loyalists like Jim Jordan (R.-Ohio)?

Claudine Gay, seated next to Liz Magill, speaks with a hand gesture

Harvard President Claudine Gay, left, speaks as University of Pennsylvania President Liz Magill listens, during a hearing of the House Committee on Education on Capitol Hill, Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2023 in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

But when Penn’s Elizabeth Magill, Harvard’s Claudine Gay and MIT’s Sally Kornbluth came to Congress, they just didn’t seem to have a clue they were being teed up by the conservative right.

They thought it was a serious inquiry into antisemitism and responded as such. They were going for nuance and were reserved when asked if  calls for genocide against Jews harassment under university policy?

Yes or no?

Bullied and harangued

The presidents didn’t want to respond to hypotheticals. They said it depends on the context.

And that’s when they were bullied, harangued and soundbited.

How many people were surprised to see a black woman among the three? That would be Claudine Gay, African American Studies scholar, and the first African American to be president of Harvard.

But she really stood for all of us.

Despite more than five hours of hearings, most people only saw the micro-clips showing the three presidents respond in a collegial, legalistic way. They were soft-spoken and reasonable, respectful of the inquiry. They did not match the volume, ire and fake passion of Stefanik.

The presidents’ demeanor was good enough in a fair fight. But this was not that. The presidents failed to understand that hearings exist for members of Congress to demagogue, beat up on their invited guests, all while the cameras roll, creating viral clips for their own re-election campaigns.

Stefanik got the news clips she wanted on every major network. But it opened an old wound about America’s reckoning on race. It made everyone question it.

Not about fighting antisemitism

Over the weekend, the key takeaway wasn’t that rising antisemitism was bad in society or on campus. Indeed, one major cable network suggested the hearings showed why the public has lost faith in higher ed, claiming it has become home of dogmatic ideology and social engineering, not academic merit.

A fellow committee member Mark Takano (D-Calif.) saw through it all. He told the Harvard Crimson the Republicans “were not really interested in the topic of antisemitism and antisemitism on campus.” Rather, Takano, thought the Republicans were playing divisive MAGA-politics.

“My own sense is that the Republicans are spring-loaded to enact a narrative that universities are bastions of liberal progressives,” Takano told the college newspaper. “They wanted to present an opportunity for their members to portray universities in a certain way.”

He was also critical of Stefanik whom he observed as taking a “hard turn to the right.”

But Stefanik’s stunt appears to be working.

Unanimous support for Harvard president

While MIT President Sally Kornbluth has received some support on her campus, Penn’s President Magill was forced to resign last weekend.  Harvard’s Gay apologized for her performance on Friday but was still under some pressure to resign.

To counter, faculty members circulated a letter of support on Sunday. But there’s also been attacks on whether as an African America woman Gay was even qualified for the job.

Some conservative outlets going into her scholarly work exposed  minor examples of plagiarism, anathema.

On Tuesday Harvard’s board voted to “unanimously stand in support of President Gay.”

All this from an inquiry into fighting antisemitism. Instead, the hearing exposed the bitterness and resentment that some still have over a move toward diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI). It is a staple MAGA argument.

Stefanik’s stunt worked so well, expect more of it. Not just in higher ed but at the workplace. The pendulum is swinging.

Filipinos beware. Political conservatives are tiring of your civil rights.

And that’s the bottom line after those hearings. Yes, we’re all against antisemitism. But as we see, in 2023, some people hate diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, even more.

Emil Guillermo is a journalist and commentator. He writes a column for Inquirer.nets US Channel. His Emil Amoks Takeout is on YouTube.com/@emilamok1

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TAGS: diversity, U.S. politics, US universities
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