Kamala Harris’s vetting team stunned even seasoned politicos by bluntly asking Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro if he’d ever worked as a double agent for Israel.

In his upcoming memoir, Shapiro—proudly Jewish and fiercely American—recounts former White House counsel Dana Remus grilling him on whether he’d “communicated with an undercover agent of Israel.”

That question isn’t just absurd. It reeks of the very anti-Semitic trope Democrats claim to despise—that Jewish Americans are loyal first to Israel, second to the United States.

Shapiro exploded. “If they were undercover,” he shot back, “how the hell would I know?” His indignation exposes a party more eager to suspect than to lead.

This episode lays bare Kamala Harris’s inner circle: paranoid, entitled and willing to demean an ally to satisfy baseless insecurities. It’s proof Democrats will stoop to slur a decorated veteran governor to check a box.

Reading Shapiro’s account, you sense the arrogance that defined 2024’s ticket rollout—a campaign more invested in identity policing than policy substance. Harris’s team prioritized loyalty tests over leadership credentials.

Shapiro’s memoir, Where We Keep the Light, hits shelves Jan. 27. It’s poised to become a must-read cautionary tale for voters fed up with weaponized politics and hollow virtue signals.

Republicans must seize this moment. We stand against the cynical games played by Harris’s camp and demand respect for every American’s patriotism, regardless of faith or heritage.

No candidate should face loyalty interrogations from a party that claims to champion tolerance. Governor Shapiro’s story underscores why it’s past time for a conservative resurgence—one grounded in common sense, fierce pride in America, and zero tolerance for anti-Semitic smears.