Governor Josh Shapiro: Branded “Double Agent for Israel” by Kamala Harris’s Vetting Team
In a jaw-dropping revelation, Pennsylvania’s Democratic governor Josh Shapiro discloses that Kamala Harris’s own vetting operatives asked him point-blank: “Are you a double agent for Israel?” The question, steeped in antisemitic overtones, exposed the raw bias at the heart of the Democrat elite’s power plays.
Shapiro, the sole Jewish candidate under consideration, recoiled. “If they were undercover,” he shot back, “how the hell would I know?” His outrage was met with a bland shrug: “Well, we have to ask.”
This wasn’t idle curiosity. It was a calculated probe into his faith, weaponized against a loyal Democrat whose only “offense” was being Jewish and unafraid to defend Israel.
Shapiro’s memoir pulls no punches. He calls out former White House counsel Dana Remus for reciting the question as if it were standard procedure. In his words, it laid bare “a lot about some of the people around the VP.”
He refused to grovel. When asked if he’d apologize for calling out campus antisemitism, Shapiro stood firm. “I believe in free speech,” he writes. “I’ll defend it with all I’ve got—even speech I disagree with, as long as it stays peaceful and constitutional.”
Behind the cordial veneer of Harris’s staff lay a ticking time bomb of identity politics. Shapiro wondered if every outsider—anyone without a federal résumé—was grilled on Israel. Or if Jews alone faced suspicion.
That knot in his stomach never loosened. Shapiro lauds the vetters for professionalism, but he makes clear: professionalism shouldn’t look like prejudice.
This revelation follows his previous calls of foul play. Shapiro slammed Harris’s memoir as “blatant lies” when she claimed he “hijacked” their running-mate interview. “Complete bullshit,” he told The Atlantic. “She’s trying to sell books and cover her ass.”
Now, the governor’s memoir shatters the facade. It shows a Democratic Party eager to weaponize religious identity and loyalty tests against its own. It’s an abuse of power under the guise of thoroughness.
Republicans should take note: Harris’s camp built its vetting process on suspicion and innuendo. Their tactics undermine the unity they purport to champion.
Shapiro’s account is a clarion call. It warns that the real threat to American values isn’t from across the aisle, but from within a party willing to trade civil rights for political theater.
This isn’t a culture war—it’s a character test. And on that test, Kamala Harris’s team failed spectacularly.





