Since his remarks Saturday night at an event held by the Israeli American Council, there’s been a robust discussion of Donald Trump’s attitude toward Jews. Having spent much of his presidency saying and doing things that could be viewed by some as not particularly friendly to the Jewish people—tweeting Hillary Clinton’s face next to a Star of David and the words “Most Corrupt Candidate Ever,” describing a group containing neo-Nazis as having some “very fine” people among it, etc.—the president appeared to go full anti-Semite during his speech, invoking the trope of dual loyalty, suggesting Jews only care about money, and describing many in the room as “brutal killers, not nice people at all.” Trump, obviously, does not like these charges, having previously described himself as “the least anti-Semitic person that you’ve ever seen in your entire life,” and probably believing it. So on Wednesday he did what any totally not-anti-Semitic person would do: He invited a pastor who thinks Jews are going to the fiery depths of hell to the White House and let him speak at, wait for it, a Hanukkah party.

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President Donald Trump signed an executive order aimed at tackling anti-Semitism on college campuses on Wednesday―but one of the speakers at the event has said that Jews are going to hell. Trump signed the order at a White House Hanukkah reception, with several prominent Jewish Americans in attendance, including New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz.

But the president also called upon evangelical Christian leader Robert Jeffress to speak, claiming he’s a “tremendous faith leader.” Jeffress, in turn, called Trump “the most pro-faith president in history.” But Jeffress has a long history of hateful comments toward other faiths. In 2010, he called both Islam and Mormonism “a heresy from the pit of hell,” then issued a warning to Jews. “Judaism―you can’t be saved being a Jew,” he declared on the Trinity Broadcasting Network.

In a 2009 sermon, Jeffress expounded on his bigotry, saying: “Not only do religions like Mormonism, Islam, Judaism, Hinduism, not only do they lead people away from the true God, they lead people to an eternity of separation from God in hell. You know, Jesus was very clear. Hell is not only going to be populated by murderers and drug dealers and child abusers. Hell is going to be filled with good religious people who have rejected the truth of Christ.”

For his part, Trump is obviously drawn to Jeffress thanks to the pastor’s ardent support. In September he claimed that impeaching Trump would lead to a “Civil War-like fracture,” and earlier this year he made it known that evangelicals who don’t support the president are “spineless morons.”

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