Gov. Hochul’s initial stance on Israel was correct until pressure from the left led to her apology
Well, thatâs how the Kathy crumbles.
Gov. Hochul last week committed candor in public â a rare event indeed â but just 24 hours later she was groveling before one of the most noxious movements in Empire State history.
There she was Friday night, all-but begging forgiveness for having included an âinappropriate analogyâ in a âpoor choice of wordsâ while addressing a fundraising dinner the previous evening.
Speaking to the United Jewish Appeal-Federation of New York at Gothamâs venerable Pierre Hotel Thursday, Hochul had sharply called out Iranian catâs-paw Hamas while underscoring her support for Israel post-10/7.
The bloody-fisted terrorist organization âmust be stoppedâ she said. And Israelis couldnât be expected to live with âthat threat, that specter, over them.â
Anodyne words, to be sure â but so far, so good.
Then she told the truth, which so many New Yorkers canât handle.
âIf Canada ever attacked Buffalo,â she projected, âIâm sorry, my friends, there would be no Canada the next day. You have a right to defend yourself, and to make sure that it never happens again. And that is Israelâs right.â
No equivocation there. Nor should there have been.
But the comment was on video, which went viral, with entirely predictable impact â and then there was Hochul, tendering an apologetic back-track to the New York Times:
âWhile I have been clear in my support of Israelâs right to self-defense,â she weaseled, âI have also repeatedly said and continue to believe that Palestinian civilian casualties should be avoided . . .â and blah, blah, blah.
Two points stand out:
- Hochulâs analogy, again, was spot on: Israelâs 10/7 toll would have been the population-adjusted equivalent of roughly 42,000 dead Americans â and God only knows how many wounded, raped or otherwise traumatized. Imagine how much ârestraintâ the United States would have exercised after such an attack â especially if Canada had been rocketing Buffalo, the governorâs hometown, for decades.
- Secondly, the governorâs analogy also was so patently ridiculous that only an imbecile, or an opportunist, would take it literally. It was a rhetorical device meant to emphasize her support for Israel â and the push-back was intended to make her back off.
And Hochul did â to her shame, and also to New Yorkâs.
It seems that the state which tasted terrorism firsthand 22-plus years ago, and which promised never to forget, has.
Or its leaders have. For the most part theyâve stood quiescent in the face of hugely disruptive, pro-Palestinian celebrations of murder, mayhem and politicized sexual assault that began within hours of the10/7 massacre, and which continue to this day.
Yes, people are allowed to protest; itâs the American way.
But politicians arenât required to go along â to exalt evil, or to acquiesce in it.
Hochul isnât the only pol to have done so â just, arguably, the most prominent.
She needs to apologize for her apology â and, in the process, perhaps claw back a little of the honor her office once commanded.