In Israel, Liberals Lost. The American Left Should Heed Their Lessons. – Foreign Policy
On Jan. 6, the president of the United States, arguing with zero evidence that his reelection was stolen, incited a violent mob to storm the Capitol, where the bravery and wits of outnumbered security officers staved off catastrophe. The same man is still the undisputed leader of one of the United States two main political parties.
The United States convulsions are dramatic but not unique. Liberalisms crises predated Donald Trump and will outlast him in America and around the world. Hungarys Prime Minister Viktor Orban has successfully swapped out independent press, judiciary, civil society, and parliamentary representatives with pliable functionaries of his own. In India, long a marvel of democracy, the Hindu nationalism of Prime Minister Narendra Modi has wreaked violence on the countrys Muslims and taken legislative steps toward undermining their citizenship, while cracking down on journalists and nongovernmental organizations. In all, according to Freedom House, democracy has deteriorated in countries where three-quarters of all humans live this past year.
Many countries hold elections, for surebut without the guarantees of speech, assembly, or religion; the respect of individual dignity in government and law that is the hallmark of liberalism; and its promise of freedom. Liberalisms global recession is real and is not going away.
Like so many people, Ive spent the last years reeling from the illiberalism sweeping the world. Yet the term illiberal is helpful only in a very limited way. It has no positive, affirmative content and is hardly something any group would call itself. It assumes anything non-liberal is a deviation from the norm.
The end of the Cold War made it easy to see things that way. But victory can blind you too, and the Wests seemingly miraculous victory over Soviet communism was as blinding as Israels own victory in the 1967 Six-Day War. Both seemed to settle not only geopolitical disputes but also ideological arguments once and for all. Western-style liberalism was to be the wave of the future, and Israels existence as both a Jewish and democratic state seemed at long last secured.
In Israel, the worlds only Jewish state, one-fifth of the citizens are Arabmostly, though not all, Muslim. It is a vibrant, raucous democracy in a largely undemocratic region; a military and technological power punching well above its weight, wracked by profound economic and social inequalities and burdened by generations of trauma; a state built by settlers who largely saw themselves not as colonizers but as stateless refugees coming home; a Western-style polity engaged in a decades-long occupation.
It has also been moving steadily in the direction of religious nationalism and authoritarian populism. The March 23 election propelled into parliament politicians belonging to the once-fringe Otzma Yehudit (Jewish Power) partya far-right group with roots in the late Rabbi Meir Kahanes violent anti-Arab Kach movement that was once described by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee as racist and reprehensible.
The half of the body politic opposed to Netanyahus combative right-wing populism has so far failed to dislodge him. Liberalisms recession in Israel can offer some lessons about liberalisms crises elsewhereand show liberals in different countries that they are in this together and need urgently to learn from one another in order to preserve the ideals and institutions they hold dear.
In his deeply researched and ambitious book Liberalism in Israel: Its History, Problems, and Futures, Tel Aviv Universitys Menachem Mautnera leading Israeli constitutional scholarsensitively and searchingly critiques his own, liberal camp, hoping to rescue it from oblivion. Doing so, he says, means rethinking liberal assumptions not only about law, but also about nationalism, economics, ethnicity, religion, and culture.
In a previous, illuminating work on Israels judiciary, Mautner demonstrated that Israels Supreme Court, under the presidency of Chief Justice Aharon Barak, developed a doctrine of liberal judicial activism going further than his avowed American role model. This was all the more remarkable given that Israel has no written constitution.
It does have a series of awkwardly named Basic Laws, mostly governing basic government structures. But 1992 saw a new one, passed jointly by the Labor and Likud parties: the Basic Law: Human Dignity and Liberty. This meta-statute incorporated international human rights principles into Israeli law and defined Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. Barak, in over a decade of remarkable and controversial judicial opinions, used this Basic Law to launch a constitutional revolution. By the time of his retirement, the Supreme Court had final say over vast swaths of parliamentary legislation and governmental policyand it had hordes of new critics.
Mautner views this judicial revolution as the crusade of a once-dominant Labor Party establishment, based on socialist ideals and holding liberal views, to retain some of its steadily vanishing power. Failing to win votes, as new religious and nationalist groups became ascendant and core liberal values declined, the former Labor hegemons as he calls them looked to the courts to save what to them were the foundations of Israeli democracy, and to their critics and rivals symbolized elitist cosmopolitanism. Backlash was not long in coming, culminating in 2018s Basic Law: Israel as the Nation-State of the Jewish People, in which the word democracy tellingly does not appear.
The vitriol heaped on Israels court is excessive, but the former Labor hegemons religious and nationalist foes were not entirely wrong. Barak and his allies were indeed fighting a culture war against themone with deep, complicated roots.
Israels secular elites had quite deliberately estranged themselves from, and weaned their children off, their own Jewish cultural resources, succumbing to the fate of revolutionaries who give their children an education as different as they can get from their own.
Israels first Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and his peers, for all their secularist, socialist rebellion, were deeply tied to Jewish tradition, texts, and history. After independence, they had no trouble making the argument to Religious Zionists and to the non-Zionist ultra-Orthodox both that the Labor Zionist ethos was not only the better defense of Jewish interests but also the better interpretation of its values. The successors of Ben-Gurions generation, however, could not make that argument, if for no other reason than that they no longer shared with their religious interlocutors the same language or the same basic understanding of who they are and what they are doing in their own state.
To the ultra-Orthodox, the enterprise of secular Jewish statehood was a deep assault on tradition, necessitating retreat to an enclave paid for by the state. To the Religious Zionists, the secularists had lost their way, failing to grasp the true meaning of Jewish statehood as the occasion for a new, muscular Judaism, and the fulfillment of Messianic longing. For Sephardic Jews, arguments over secular Jewish nationalism were all very foreign.
The reengagement that Mautner urges, then, isnt a call for Israeli liberals to stop being themselves but to dig more deeply into the histories that made them who they are, see what they can learn, and interpret anew.
Deep, informed dialogue with the best of American political and legal thought is on every page. Yet, Mautner argues, seeking to imitate U.S. democracy isnt the answer. After all, the United States is full of problems: structural economic inequalities, a deeply dysfunctional health care system, high levels of imprisonment, and unending racial injusticeall of which made possible the rise of Trump.
Mautner calls on his comrades on the Israeli left to lay aside American liberalisms brand of rugged individualism in favor of what he calls the liberalism of human flourishing. From this perspective, politics still aims to help individuals flourish independently, but also through meaningful belonging to ethnic, religious, and cultural communities.
Concretely, such a project would mean parting with a form of liberalism modeled on untrammeled American capitalism and looking instead to social democratic models found in Europe. This could mean letting different localities arrange their own religious affairs, resurrecting ideas of civic nationalism as an alternative to ethnic nationalism, working toward a humbler and thus more legitimate judiciary, and finding ways to engage in good faith with religious thinkers and their ideas while still holding fast to fundamental freedoms.
Where in all this, one might ask, is Israels painful conflict with the Palestinians? To Mautner, the absence of robust liberal nationalism is both a cause and effect. In bringing out all of nationalisms evils, the occupation discredits nationalism as a whole, making it that much harder for Israeli liberals to assert the shared national commitments would make Israels broadly nationalist center take them seriously. In other words, if you want to end the occupation, Mautner argues, dont throw out nationalism but make it more liberal (as many early Zionists, including Theodor Herzl, hoped to do).
Mautners argument has lessons for other countries: We live in a world of nation-states that isnt going away anytime soon, not least because the kind of meaningful belonging nationhood provides speaks to deep human needs. By refusing to engage with the worlds of meaning that many people of good will draw from ethnicity, shared history, culture, and religious life, liberals are not helping their cause.
The point isnt to capitulate to the bristling animosities of sectarian or identity politics but to speak clearly about how liberal values are needed if people want to live together, seeking their varied paths of communal, cultural, and religious fulfillment and flourishing, without tearing each other to pieces. This is also true of the state whose own brand of nationhood, it likes to think, is the great exception: the United States of America.
There is a deep paradox at the heart of Americas claim to leadership of the democratic world, and it is tied to American exceptionalism. Its geography as a continent secure from invasion, its multidimensional religious history, and its being a nation of immigrants make its own senses of religion, ethnicity, and nationalism different from those of most every other country. The identities of African Americans, the descendants of people brought in chains, are inextricably intertwined with their having been the victims of the countrys original sin. (That the earlier American original sin, the slaughter and displacement of Native Americans, is not an acute source of discomfort to much of the body politic is because it was so murderously successful.)
The stunning Trumpist resurgence of racist politics in response to, among other things, the presidency of Barack Obama was on display in the Jan. 6 Capitol insurrection, where Confederate flags were flying and Camp Auschwitz T-shirts were on display.
American liberals need to understand where the United States is exceptional and where it is not. The reckoning with race every American must make is at once very public and very personal. Public, because anti-Black racism that indelibly shaped American democracy for so long. And personal, because every American, no matter when or how their ancestors arrived, has inherited that past and must grapple with its legacies today.
The illiberalism of the right is more obviously violent; the illiberalism of the left is most pronounced in academia and to some extent in journalism. But both share the insidious assumption that we cannot think or feel as humans outside our bloodstreams and that all politics is a zero-sum struggle for power and privilege.
How then can the United States hope to serve as an example to other liberal democracies? The answer is that America can lead only if it is willing to learn.
Something embattled liberals need to understand is that while they may see their opponents as nothing but destructive, that it not at all how they see themselves. Yes, authoritarian populists, hyper-nationalists, and radical religionists are regularly on the attack, but they win adherents not only because they express peoples anger, but also because they offer them a vision of something good. Those visions, deceptive though they can be, speak to profound human needs for connection, community, and commitment that the U.S.-led post-Cold War order of globalized economics and culture simply fails to provide.
That failure is compounded by the very American faith that those who differ from Americas vision of what is good are bound sooner or later to come around. The excesses of Trumpism on the one hand and the Great Awokening on the other show us where those frustrations can lead when liberalism fails to respond.
The end of American exceptionalism, saddening though it may be, is also liberating. Crafting American policies rooted in liberalism at home and abroadwith lucid views of its genuine shortcomings and failures, of how far it reaches and how far it doesntis crucial. Self-professed liberals must also examine what kind of philosophical or theological justification liberalism needs to maintain its own conception of what it means to lead a good life.
Such an effort not only makes good sense but also seeks to reap the rich harvest of differing ideas of how to protect life and libertyfrom the violence of the state, the ravages of the market, the authoritarianism of the clergy, or the monolithic conformism of the tribe. This is liberalisms deepest, abiding good.
See the article here:
In Israel, Liberals Lost. The American Left Should Heed Their Lessons. - Foreign Policy
- Opinion: No traitors in the House, but foreign interference, and the Liberals non-response to it, is still a serious concern - The Globe and Mail - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- California congresswoman and her fellow liberals users blame Trump for deadly mid-air collision near Reagan ai - Daily Mail - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Opinion: The unwavering confidence of the Liberals longshot outsider - The Globe and Mail - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- BATRA'S BURNING QUESTIONS: Who's the bigger threat to Canada's democracy, Trump or Trudeau's liberals? - Toronto Sun - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- POLL: Conservatives more optimistic, liberals more concerned about free speech in 2025 - Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Progressive Conservatives hold decisive lead (50%) over Liberals (24%), NDP (20%) as Ontario election officially underway - Ipsos in Canada - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- The race is on: Ontario's NDP and Liberals battle to claim their place as the best choice against Ford - CBC.ca - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Liberals want to erase women. Trump is standing up for our most basic rights. | Opinion - Yahoo! Voices - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- The Week in Polling: Americans are anxious about Canadian tariff retaliation; federal Liberals inch forward; Canadas perceived global reputation at... - February 1st, 2025 [February 1st, 2025]
- Opinion | Stop Feeling Stunned and Wounded, Liberals. Its Time to Fight Back. - The New York Times - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Elon Musk Nukes Liberals With Hilarious Video, Will Have Wokes Shaking With Rage: WATCH - Outkick - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- PATRICK LAWRENCE: Where Have All the Liberals Gone? - Consortium News - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Lorne Gunter: Liberals like Joly say they've beefed up the border they haven't - Edmonton Journal - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Liberals want to erase women. Trump is standing up for our most basic rights. | Opinion - USA TODAY - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Tom Mulcair: Three reasons why the Liberals wont want to delay the next election - CTV News - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Braid: National poll shows leaderless Liberals starting to creep up on Conservatives - Calgary Herald - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Stephen A. Smith calls out liberals with blunt reason for Trump win: Hes closer to normal than the left - Fox News - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Liberals claim Fords plan to visit Washington during election is explicitly partisan - Global News Toronto - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Meet the liberals who moved to Canada to escape Trump - MSN - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Trump 2.0 is already assailed by lawsuits, but it's small comfort to Americas defeated liberals | Emma Brockes - The Guardian - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- If liberals oppose the death penalty, they must oppose assisted dying too - The Telegraph - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Liberals open to recalling Parliament if opposition parties want to pass tariff relief, minister says - MSN - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Liberals open to recalling Parliament should opposition parties want to pass tariff relief package, minister says - National Post - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- EDITORIAL: How can anyone trust the Liberals? - Toronto Sun - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Meet the liberals who moved to Canada to escape Trump...only for their plans to backfire - Daily Mail - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- PCs, Liberals and NDP all say they plan to build the Grimsby GO Station if elected - CBC.ca - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Opposition parties divided on keeping Liberals in power to pass emergency relief to counter Trump tariffs - The Globe and Mail - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Randall Denley: Just attacking Doug Ford won't bring the victory Ontario Liberals think it will - National Post - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Battins Liberals are soaring in the polls. They might just be the dog that caught the car - The Age - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Anthony Furey: Doug Ford readies to bulldoze NDP and Liberals - National Post - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Trudeau pulled the Liberals left. Where do they go from here? - CBC.ca - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Federal Liberals make $663 million promise to TransLink starting next year after an election - Vancouver Sun - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Joly won't say if Liberals are open to renegotiating free trade deal over Trump's tariff threats - National Post - January 30th, 2025 [January 30th, 2025]
- Texas Politics Keeps Moving Rightward. Meet Ten Liberals Who Fled the State. - Texas Monthly - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Facebook Fact Checks Were Never Going to Save Us. They Just Made Liberals Feel Better. - The Intercept - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Liberals win support of NDP, independents by promising enhanced review of Churchill Falls MOU - Yahoo News UK - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Rebuilding the Liberals after Trudeau - The Globe and Mail - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Opinion: To avoid decimation, the Liberals likely need a leader from Quebec - The Globe and Mail - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Several top Liberals say they're eyeing leadership but they're waiting to see the rules first - Yahoo News Canada - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- The Liberals could be crushed in the next election. Why would anyone want to lead them? - CBC News - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Local Liberals applaud Trudeau and his decision to leave while Conservatives lament his legacy - Calgary Herald - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Liberals Are Facing a Global Meltdown - AMAC Official Website - Join and Explore the Benefits - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- Canada's Trudeau resigns after nine years in power as Liberals force him out - The Japan Times - January 9th, 2025 [January 9th, 2025]
- LGBTQ liberals start arming themselves over baseless fear of being placed in 'concentration camps:' report - New York Post - January 6th, 2025 [January 6th, 2025]
- Harvard: Liberals Struggle More with Mental Health - Patheos - January 6th, 2025 [January 6th, 2025]
- Liberals in a better place with Canadians on carbon tax, says Guilbeault - iPolitics.ca - January 6th, 2025 [January 6th, 2025]
- With Justin Trudeau's Resignation Coming, What's Next For Canada And The Liberals? - Times Now - January 6th, 2025 [January 6th, 2025]
- Why Liberals Struggle to Cope With Epochal Change - The Atlantic - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Austrian liberals quit coalition talks, throwing process into turmoil - Reuters - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- The Federal Liberals New Years Eve Nightmare: Party vote intent sinks to 16%, Trudeau approval at all-time low - Angus Reid Institute - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Braid: Extinction in Parliament is now a real threat to Liberals under Justin Trudeau - Calgary Herald - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Joe Oliver: Where do Trudeau and the Liberals go from here? - Financial Post - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- GUNTER: Liberals heading into election a desperate party - Toronto Sun - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- Liberals amnesty for banned guns ends this year. Heres what gun owners need to know - True North - January 3rd, 2025 [January 3rd, 2025]
- A spirited debate: Liberals, conservatives and you - Spectrum News - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Report ties Romanian liberals to TikTok campaign that fueled pro-Russia candidate - POLITICO Europe - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Breakenridge: UCP at a loss when not battling Trudeau's Liberals - Calgary Herald - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Why Liberals Will Give Two Cheers for Trump - Foreign Policy In Focus - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Kelly McParland: The Liberals have only one choice an election - National Post - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Poilievre Opens 25-Point Lead over Trudeau on Being Best Equipped to Deal with Trump. Liberals (20%, -1) and NDP (20%, -1) Battle for Second while... - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Faizan Mustafa writes: Why liberals and minorities need to value Mohan Bhagwats words - The Indian Express - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- From Public Defender To Public Servant If Liberals Were Honest, Theyd Love The Kash Patel Story - tippinsights - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- LILLEY: Infighting shows Liberals can't run their party or country - Toronto Sun - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Whats next for Trudeau and the Liberals after a chaotic 2024 - The Globe and Mail - December 25th, 2024 [December 25th, 2024]
- Liberals founded the United States and will continue to make it a great nation | Letters - Tennessean - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Abortion is the last refuge of the Liberals - The Globe and Mail - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- David Harsanyi: Don't trash the Constitution to dunk on the liberals - The Union Leader - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Democrats and College Liberals: Severely Out of Touch - The Colgate Maroon-News - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Liberals Are Already Fighting Each Other On Bluesky - Outkick - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- An ad supporting Jenifer Branning finds imaginary liberals on the Mississippi Supreme Court - Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Dont Trash the Constitution To Dunk on the Liberals - The New York Sun - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Want To Exchange Ideas With Annoying Liberals Like Yourself? Here's How To Delete Your X Account and Join Bluesky. - Washington Free Beacon - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Unprincipled Liberals & the Principle of Cause and Effect - The European Conservative - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Piers Morgan Wants Liberals to 'Just Shut Up' About Trump Winning the Election: 'Enough of It' | Video - TheWrap - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Jewish liberals should follow Morning Joe and drop the resistance - JNS.org - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- The Week in Polling: Liberals and NDP tied for first time since 2015, Canadians twice as likely to feel worse off financially than better, and most... - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- Chris Selley: Hoping Trump will help them isn't looking good for the Liberals - National Post - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- How Bluesky is coping with influx of liberals rushing to quit X - The Times - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- The winners and losers of the Liberals holiday tax break and cash giveaway - Toronto Star - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]
- The winners and losers of the Liberals' holiday tax break and cash giveaway - CTV News - November 23rd, 2024 [November 23rd, 2024]