This article's factual accuracy is disputed .(December 2019) |
Type | Political initiative |
---|---|
Key people | Elizabeth Pipko |
Funding | Red Sea Rising PAC [1] |
Website | theexodusmovement |
Formerly called | Jexodus |
The Exodus Movement (formerly known as Jexodus), is an American right-wing political campaign aimed at encouraging Jews to leave the Democratic Party. Spokesperson Elizabeth Pipko states that "overwhelmingly, the Jewish people have supported Democrats over the years," she believes that the Republican Party can make inroads. [1] [2] In the 2018 midterm election 79% of Jewish voters supported Democratic candidates. [3]
Jexodus was launched in early March 2019 at the 2019 Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC). [1] [2]
In 2019, the Jexodus website stated their mission as "Jexodus is a non-partisan nonprofit that unites people of good will – regardless of faith, ethnicity, identity, and political affiliation – around the simple, formerly non-controversial idea that Anti-Semitism must never be mainstreamed by the media or by any political party." [4]
The organization was started by Jeff Ballabon, an advisor to Donald Trump and a Republican Party lobbyist. [1] [5] Elizabeth Pipko, a Trump supporter, [6] is the group's spokesperson. [1] [7] Jexodus has been criticized as "likely a clumsy astroturf effort rather than an actual grassroots movement", in part because the Jexodus website was registered November 5, 2018 – before the congressional election and before those representatives it accused of anti-Semitism had even been elected. [8] [9] [10] On March 12, 2019, Trump tweeted his support of the movement. [11] Jexodus has been described as "far right" by Haaretz [6] and as "fringe" by Yahoo! News. [7]
Jexodus became The Exodus Movement on March 21, 2019. [1] The name change came after widespread ridicule of the name "Jexodus" for the redundancy of calling for a "Jewish Exodus" when The Exodus was Jewish to begin with. [12]
The Republican Party, also known as the GOP, is one of the two major contemporary political parties in the United States. It emerged as the main political rival of the then-dominant Democratic Party in the 1850s, and the two parties have dominated American politics since then.
Anti-German is the generic name applied to a variety of theoretical and political tendencies within the left mainly in Germany and Austria. The Anti-Germans form one of the main camps within the broader Antifa movement, alongside the Anti-Zionist anti-imperialists, after the two currents split between the 1990s and the early 2000s as a result of their diverging views on Israel. The anti-Germans are a fringe movement within the German left: In 2006 Deutsche Welle estimated the number of anti-Germans to be between 500 and 3,000. The basic standpoint of the anti-Germans includes opposition to German nationalism, a critique of mainstream left anti-capitalist views, which are thought to be simplistic and structurally antisemitic, and a critique of antisemitism, which is considered to be deeply rooted in German cultural history. As a result of this analysis of antisemitism, support for Israel and opposition to Anti-Zionism is a primary unifying factor of the anti-German movement. The critical theory of Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer is often cited by anti-German theorists.
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it's an operation entirely engineered by conservative flacks, doing its best to masquerade as an authentic grassroots movement.