World
A new anti-Zionist committee has endorsed candidates who believe Jews were behind 9/11
JTA – A new group opposing AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) is backing anti-Israel candidates across party lines. Some of its endorsees have blamed Israel and Jews for 9/11 and the Charlie Kirk assassination. Its founder claims Hamas’s 7 October attack was a “false flag” operation, and has referred to Jewish people as “the Synagogue of Satan”.
This is the Anti-Zionist America Political Action Committee, or AZAPAC.
With stated aims to “de-Zionise” the American government and end military aid to Israel, AZAPAC is unlike the other political action committees (PACs) that have recently popped up as a counterweight to AIPAC, the pro-Israel lobby that has poured millions of dollars into political races across the country.
Those groups – including American Priorities, Citizens Again AIPAC Corruption, and the Peace, Love and Accountability PAC – are rallying their support around a brand of pro-Palestinian progressives in line with Congress’s left-wing “Squad” members. Michael Rectenwald, AZAPAC’s founder and a self-described libertarian, is taking a different approach.
“We’re not like leftist anti-Zionists, calling for ‘from the river to the sea’ and all this nonsense,” said Rectenwald in an interview. “We are not trying to say the State of Israel should not exist. That is not our concern. Our concern is the US government only, and what it’s doing.”
To that end, Rectenwald’s group, which was founded last summer, has endorsed fringe candidates across the political spectrum, from both Republican and Democratic parties, as well as independents. The primary criteria for endorsement, Rectenwald said, is that candidates will vote against aid to Israel, and do not take money from pro-Israel lobbying groups.
AZAPAC’s spending has been relatively minimal – it had raised $111 556 by the end of 2025, according to Federal Electoral Commission filings – but it taps into an ascendant set of sentiments, including a rising anti-Israel faction of Republicans, as well as the conspiracy-theory mindset increasingly occupying Americans of all stripes.
Some of the candidates it has endorsed have promoted conspiracy theories about Jews. Multiple AZAPAC-endorsed politicians believe that Jews were responsible for 9/11 and that Israel was behind the assassination of right-wing political activist Charlie Kirk.
Meanwhile, Rectenwald himself has taken to social media – and tried courting avowed antisemite Nick Fuentes – in an attempt to broaden the group’s reach, leaning into antisemitic tropes about Jews and Israel himself in the process.
“Don’t die for ‘israel’. Don’t die for the Syn@gogue of S@t@n,” he wrote in a since-deleted tweet in March about the war in Iran.
In another tweet, he wrote that “The Synagogue of Satan refers to those who are genetically Jewish but have rejected Christ and thus utterly forfeit the heavenly Jerusalem”.
He wrote that Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel was a “false flag” operation, and suggested that 9/11 was, too.
In the group’s launch video, Rectenwald, narrating, called pro-Israel politicians “puppets” whose “strings are pulled by donors loyal to the modern nation state of Israel”.
Rectenwald’s gripe, he says, is the control that the pro-Israel lobby has over US politicians. “Every Zionist in the US government should be tried for treason,” he wrote, adding in a reply that those politicians are more loyal to Israel than to America.
But his theories about Jews controlling governments have exceeded the bounds of the United States and Israel.
“Once you study England, beginning with [statesman Oliver] Cromwell, you know it wasn’t the British empire to follow but the Jewish empire,” he wrote last year. “That’s not antisemitism. It’s just history.”
Rectenwald acknowledged that AZAPAC has faced accusations of antisemitism.
“Every once in a while we get somebody coming along and saying we’re antisemites – ‘This is Hitler’s playbook’, or something like that,” Rectenwald said. “We just answer by saying this: It’s nothing to do with antisemitism. We have Jewish supporters. Listen, if Max Blumenthal [a journalist who writes critically about Israel] wanted to join our board, we would welcome him with open arms, for example. So there’s nothing about discrimination.”
Opposition to AIPAC and US aid to Israel have become increasingly normative positions among Democrats. The bulk of AZAPAC’s candidates, however, are Republicans running on “America First” platforms against pro-Israel, AIPAC-endorsed incumbents, such as Representatives Randy Fine and Keith Self, whom the group sees as being “Israel-first”.
The challengers are part of a growing anti-Israel movement within the Republican Party, along with personalities including Tucker Carlson and Fuentes, that opposes President Donald Trump’s Israel alliance, and is considered by some Republicans to pose a threat to the party’s future. Like Carlson and Fuentes, candidates have espoused conspiracy theories about Jews.
Mike Wilnau, a Republican congressional candidate in Florida, was endorsed by Republican gubernatorial candidate James Fishback in addition to AZAPAC. Wilnau, who has been vocally opposed to the war in Iran, claimed that “Israel killed Charlie Kirk for war in Iran”, and wrote on X, “Don’t forget, the Jewish messiah is the Christian antichrist.”
Wilnau isn’t the only AZAPAC endorsee pushing Kirk conspiracy theories.
Michael Faris, who is running for Mitch McConnell’s Senate seat in Kentucky with AZAPAC’s support, posted a poll on X, asking his followers, “Was Charlie Kirk assassinated because of his shifting views on Jewish billionaire donors?” 79% of the 299 voters said “Yes”.
In February, Faris reposted an AI-generated video dramatising a conspiracy theory in which a Jewish real estate mogul orchestrated 9/11. He also wrote that until “about 18 months ago, I had never even heard the word Zionist”, adding that it was time to “wake up”. And in response to billionaire Robert Kraft’s Super Bowl ad about antisemitism, Faris wrote, “I will not be posting a blue square. Thanks anyway. That’s a fake, manufactured crisis.”
So far in this midterm election cycle, AZAPAC has not picked winners.
Endorsee Mark Newgent lost his Texas Republican primary against Self in early March, 80.2% to 19.8%. Newgent repeatedly challenged Self to support the release of the Epstein files rather than “continue to protect paedophiles for AIPAC”.
Zeeshan Hafeez, an AZAPAC-backed Democrat, received the fourth-most votes in Texas’s 33rd district primary, with 8.5%. Colin Allred won with 44% of the vote.
Cynthia McKinney, a former Democratic congresswoman who was running with the Green Party in Georgia, would have been an AZAPAC pick except that she suspended her congressional campaign because it did not raise enough funds for the state’s filing fee. “We were asked to provide the funds but with insufficient time in which to do so,” Rectenwald wrote in an email.
McKinney tweeted in 2021 that “Zionists did” 9/11, and included a complimentary quote from Louis Farrakhan, the Nation of Islam leader who has a history of antisemitism, on her website. She is now pivoting to run for governor of Georgia, according to her website.
The group has also endorsed Republicans Tyler Dykes, who was arrested for assaulting law enforcement during the 6 January 2021 Capitol attack; and Nick Hankins, whose positions include banning “Islamic followers from immigrating” because “Islam is not compatible with the Constitution or American values”.
Casey Putsch, who is running for governor of Ohio, had been endorsed by AZAPAC, but the group has since removed his name from its website. Putsch drew accusations of dog whistling to Nazis when he advertised an upcoming “beer hall rally”, which, combined with his last name, evokes the name of the “beer hall putsch”, a failed coup attempt led by Adolf Hitler. He had also made a YouTube video in which he asked the AI tool Grok to name Hitler’s “good” qualities. AZAPAC didn’t provide an explanation for its withdrawn endorsement, referring questions to the Putsch campaign. The campaign didn’t respond to request for comment.
Rectenwald, who is Catholic, said he was raised in a predominantly German and Italian neighbourhood in Pittsburgh, and that he “didn’t know what a Jewish person was until I was an adult, frankly”. Since then, he has lived near a predominantly Jewish Pittsburgh neighbourhood and said his children have made a number of Jewish friends in school.
Though Rectenwald denies being a purveyor of antisemitism, he has also not been one to denounce it online. Leo Terrell, the often-tweeting leader of the Justice Department’s antisemitism task force, wrote last year, “We will eliminate antisemitism!!” Rectenwald responded, “Antisemitism is free speech.”




Ian Levinson
April 13, 2026 at 12:38 pm
Let’s be absolutely clear: endorsing candidates who claim us Jews were behind 9/11 is not political dissent, it is antisemitic filth. It is a grotesque recycling of centuries‑old lies designed to scapegoat and dehumanize. Every credible investigation has proven that 9/11 was carried out by al‑Qaeda terrorists. To twist that history into a weapon against us Jews is malicious, cowardly, and intellectually bankrupt.
This committee has revealed itself not as a voice of justice but as a megaphone for hate. Dressing up antisemitism as ‘anti‑Zionism’ is a fraud. It poisons legitimate debate about Middle East politics and drags it into the gutter of conspiracy theories. It betrays solidarity with victims of 9/11, it betrays truth, and it betrays any claim to moral credibility.
Those who endorse or spread these lies are not activists—they are propagandists for hate. They are enemies of truth, enemies of justice, and enemies of the very empathy they pretend to champion. If you care about freedom, if you care about dignity, if you care about humanity, you must reject this committee and its candidates outright.
There is no excuse. There is no nuance. There is only condemnation. Lies that blame us Jews for 9/11 are not resistance—they are antisemitism, pure and simple.”