DEBUNKED: False Claim That Eric Hovde Used Antisemitic Slur
Actually, Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin is the Wisconsin U.S. Senate candidate who has taken anti-Israel positions, including flip-flopping on a ceasefire.
An error-riddled article that falsely trashes Republican Senate candidate Eric Hovde contradicts its own central claim... in the same story.
How irresponsible is the article by Haaretz journalist Ben Samuels?
This is the "shock" headline that is certain to end up in a Democratic campaign ad: "Trump-Backed GOP Front-Runner For Wisconsin Senate Seat Has History Of Invoking Antisemitic Slurs."
The evidence for this extremely irresponsible accusation is that the pro-Israel Hovde allegedly used the term "shyster."
However, in the same article, Haaretz admits, "The term 'shyster' is not by definition an explicitly antisemitic slur."
Despite this glaring concession, which destroys the story's own headline, the Wisconsin Democratic Party immediately leaped on the claim, repeating it in a press release.
Got that? So the publication accuses Hovde of making antisemitic slurs that it admits are not "by definition an explicitly antisemitic slur." Of course, most people won't know that because the article is behind a paywall.
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel columnist Dan Bice shared the claim unquestioningly on X.
https://twitter.com/DanielBice/status/1792652452950347884
Hovde has been staunchly pro-Israel, whereas Baldwin has called for a ceasefire after being hounded by pro Gaza activists, voiced support for bringing Palestinian refugees to the U.S., has a history of going soft on Iran, and previously supported an Islamic group that now blames Israel for the October 7 attack.
https://twitter.com/EricHovde/status/1779265612860027185
The Haaretz author then claims that the word "is a widely understood dog whistle for which public figures have previously faced criticism and legal action."
However, it's easy to find articles that paint a different picture of the word and its origins.
In a lengthy article in the New York Law Journal, Daniel J. Kornstein analyzed whether the term "shyster" is an antisemitic slur. He determined, "To be sure, shyster is a derogatory term. It may even be defamatory. But by itself and without more, it is derogatory and defamatory to lawyers, not Jews. Shysters come in different religions."
He wrote that, in 1982, a man named Gerald Cohen investigated the word's origin.
"Cohen found no anti-Semitism in the derivation of shyster. It was coined by a Manhattan newspaper editor in 1843-1844. Cohen described how the newspaper was on a crusade against legal and political corruption," Kornstein wrote. "During this crusade, the editor formed the word 'shyster' from the vulgar German word Scheisse (= excrement), hence 'scheisser' became 'shyster.'" Kornstein later wrote a retrospective looking back on his article, although it's also behind a paywall.
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines the word as a "person who is dishonest especially in politics or in the practice of law." Dictionary.com notes, "Origin of shyster1 1835–45, Americanism; probably < German Scheisser" and defines it as:
- "a lawyer who uses unprofessional or questionable methods.
- a person who gets along by petty, sharp practices."
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