Vice President JD Vance again downplayed the idea that conservatives should safeguard their ranks against antisemitism, a week after his ally Tucker Carlson hosted yet another antisemitic conspiracy theorist on his web show.
Vanceâs latest brief comments, made Tuesday during an interview with conservative radio host and CNN pundit Scott Jennings, came in response to Jennings asking, âDoes the conservative movement need to warehouse anybody out there espousing antisemitism in any way?â
âNo it doesnât, Scott,â the vice president replied, toward the end of their interview.
Vance continued by asserting that conservatives, drawing on Christian influences, were welcoming of all backgrounds.
âI think we need to reject all forms of ethnic hatred, whether itâs antisemitism, anti-Black hatred, anti-white hatred,â he said. âAnd I think thatâs one of the great things about the conservative coalition, is that we are, I think, fundamentally rooted in the Christian principles that founded the United States of America.â
He added, âAnd one of those very important principles is that we judge people as individuals. Every person is made in the image of God. You judge them by what they do, not by what ethnic group they belong to.â
Vanceâs comments follow a series of similar remarks by the vice president over the past month as major right-wing groups such as Turning Point USA and the Heritage Foundation grapple with the growing influence of Nick Fuentes and other openly antisemitic forces. Vance has also indicated his own skepticism in the U.S.-Israel relationship and stated that stopping immigration is the best approach to fighting antisemitism.
One Jewish conservative analyst still employed with Heritage â after a slew of employees left for a competing group â criticized Vanceâs latest comments.
âNeed a better answer from @JDVance on why the conservative movement should not tolerate antisemitism than what is effectively the equivalent of @TheDemocratsâ ââŠand Islamophobiaâ response,â Daniel Flesch, a Heritage policy analyst for the Middle East and North Africa, posted on the social network X.
Flesch referenced his contention that Democratic leadersâ stock answer to addressing antisemitism is that it must be paired with addressing Islamophobia, rather than treated as its own unique problem.
Among Jewish conservativesâ biggest areas of consternation within the party right now: Carlson, the media figure who has platformed Fuentes and other conspiracy theorists while also maintaining close ties with Turning Point, Heritage and Vance himself. This week in Israelâs Knesset, a lawmaker in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs Likud party denounced Carlson and fellow podcaster Candace Owens by name in an English-language speech.
Last week Carlson continued to fan the flames by hosting Ian Carroll, a conspiracy theorist who has proclaimed âIsrael did 9/11â; that âIsrael did their best to embellish and enflame the history booksâ on the Holocaust; and that sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein was âworking on behalf of Israel.â
Carroll has made inroads in the conservative media sphere for a while. He appeared on Joe Roganâs mega-popular podcast last year and, in 2024, moderated a campaign event for then-presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., today President Donald Trumpâs secretary of health and human services. Carrollâs appearance on Carlsonâs show came after both Trump and Vance refused to denounce Carlson for his friendly interview with Fuentes last year.
In their Jan. 2 interview, Carroll and Carlson primarily discussed the 2017 mass shooting at a music festival in Las Vegas. Carroll shared numerous conspiracy theories about the events of that evening, during which the shooter also fired rounds at a jet fuel tank stored at a nearby airport.
âAnd then thereâs things happening at the airport that are strange, that thereâs some shooting happening at the airport. So itâs like, is this a gang war between the Italian mob and the Jewish mob? Is this a CIA operation that went wrong?â Carroll muses at one point. âIs this, like, a Mossad operation? Any of those things would need to fit the facts.â
Carroll continued, âIn lieu of enough facts, you can try to fit a perpetrator to the facts and invent explanations that will work.â
Later in the interview, Carlson muses about Carroll directly to him, âIâve never seen anybody come to prominence faster, ever, in our world. And thatâs led to a lot of speculation that youâre, like, a CIA officer in disguise.â
Carroll then offers, âOr Iâm like, Mossad.â
To which Carlson concludes, âMy personal explanation is youâre just an amazing explainer and a diligent researcher, and youâre really interested in whatâs true. And those are the three qualities that make a successful person in our world.â