Introduction
In the nearly 11 months following the massacre at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh in which the alleged gunman, Robert Bowers, killed 11 people and injured six others, news media have more often mentioned anti-Semitism in reference to the political left than the right -- 56% to 44%, respectively.
Yet reporting from The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette paints a picture of a gunman steeped in conservative and white nationalist circles. The paper describes Bowers’ fascination with conservative radio show host Jim Quinn and “aggressive online provocateurs of the right wing’s fringe.” He also promoted anti-Semitic conspiracy theories online and posted on Gab, a social media platform known for its far-right community. And Bowers was not the only far-right extremist to commit acts of violence in 2018: The Anti-Defamation League noted that “right-wing extremists were responsible for 49 (or 98%) of the 50 domestic extremist-related killings” that year.
Despite this reality of deadly anti-Semitic acts perpetuated by far-right white supremacists, media not only referenced perceived anti-Semitism on the left more often than anti-Semitism on the right, they specifically mentioned rhetoric from the left, such as comments from freshmen Reps. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) that were characterized as anti-Semitic, more often than they did anti-Semitic acts of violence and other actions from the right, such as the shootings at the Pittsburgh and Poway synagogues. Of the total media mentions of anti-Semitism found, 53% referred to rhetoric from the left while 25% were about acts from the right; an additional 19% of references were about rhetoric from the right.
Over the same time, President Donald Trump and other Republicans have been “weaponizing” charges of anti-Semitism by expressing outrage over comments perceived as anti-Semitic from Democratic lawmakers -- despite Trump’s own history of using anti-Semitic rhetoric and continually tweeting dog whistles that contain anti-Semitic tropes. Media unwittingly aid this right-wing strategy when they present a false equivalency between perceived anti-Semitic rhetoric from the left and deadly right-wing anti-Semitic violence.