World

Eylon Levy earns admirers – and reportedly one serious enemy

Published

on

JTA – Roughly twice as many people have viewed a single instance of Eylon Levy raising his eyebrows as there are citizens of the country he was defending when he did it.

“Does Israel not think that Palestinian lives are valued as highly as Israeli lives?” Sky News journalist Kay Burley asked Levy, a spokesperson for the Israeli government, on live TV in late November, as Israel was in the process of releasing three Palestinian prisoners for each Israeli hostage freed from Gaza.

“That’s an astonishing accusation,” Levy responded, his expressive eyebrows shooting up in disbelief. “If we could release one prisoner for every one hostage we would obviously do that,” he retorted.

He shared the clip in a tweet that went viral, and has now been seen more than 16 million times. It was, he wrote, “The first question that left me speechless – but only for a second.”

It was also a breakout moment for the British-accented Oxbridge graduate who has been called “Israel’s prince of public diplomacy”, known in Hebrew as hasbara. Tens of thousands of people flooded to watch him on social media, increasing his follower count on X, formerly Twitter, by more than sevenfold, to 175 000. He has another 178 000 on Instagram. His social media antics gave Israel a powerful weapon in the bruising battles that have become ever more intense since 7 October.

Now, in a sign of how Israel’s wartime unity is fraying, Levy is finding himself embattled – by Sara Netanyahu, the wife of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who reportedly holds it against Levy that he criticised her husband’s leadership before 7 October. An initial report that he would be pushed out of the National Public Diplomacy Directorate (NPDD) has been batted back, but rumours are still swirling that he could face consequences because of Sara Netanyahu’s famous ire.

Levy’s exit, if it comes, would strip the prime minister’s office of one of its savviest public defenders at a time when international opinion is turning more strongly against the Israeli war effort.

Levy declined to comment last Monday, instead referring questions to the prime minister’s office. The office denied reports that he could be penalised for his politics, saying, “The directorate works according to professional standards.”

Born in London to Israeli parents, Levy studied first at Oxford University, where he was involved in debate. A far-left member of Parliament famously walked out rather than debate Levy, saying he did not debate Israelis. He then earned a graduate degree in international relations from Cambridge, researching the impact of Jewish immigrants from Arab countries, including his own grandparents, on Israel’s development.

From there, he moved to Israel, arriving at the end of the 2014 Gaza War. Enlisting in the Israel Defense Forces, he was assigned to the unit responsible for implementing Israeli civil policy in the West Bank and Gaza in co-ordination with the Palestinian Authority and other international groups. After his service, he spent several years as a news anchor on Israeli television before joining the office of Israeli President Isaac Herzog as its international media advisor.

In the middle of 2023, Levy quit his job in Herzog’s office. The country had been torn apart by a proposal from Netanyahu’s right-wing government to overhaul Israel’s judiciary.

As Herzog sought to broker a compromise, Levy sided with the critics, becoming an even more outspoken pro-democracy protester after leaving his government post.

His personal criticism of Netanyahu continued into the first days of the war. “This will be Netanyahu’s legacy,” he tweeted on 8 October. “Not the COVID-19 vaccines. Not the Abraham Accords. Not judicial reform or the protests. History books will open with one of the deadliest terror attacks in world history, on his watch, after nearly 15 years in charge of our security.”

But he soon drafted himself to the government’s defence, joining the hundreds of thousands of Israelis who set aside their objections to the government in favour of a unified, powerful response to Hamas’s attack.

Levy explained his decision to join the government he once excoriated in an interview with Globes, an Israeli magazine. “Like many, I participated in the protests against reform. It’s no secret,” he said. “There was Israel before 7 October, and there’s Israel after. Nothing will return to what it was before. There’s now only one task: to win the war, and for that we must put the wars of the Jews aside and unite.”

Levy’s addition to the government’s public advocacy team came at a crucial time, with the NPDD in a state of disarray. Its leader, Likud Knesset member Galit Distel Atbaryan, resigned on 13 October after being criticised for speaking English poorly.

By contrast, Levy’s flawless native English made him a successful sparring partner on news programmes around the world. In another sharp viral exchange, Levy took aim at Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar on 26 November.

Varadkar had tweeted about the release from captivity of a nine-year-old Israeli girl whose father is Irish. “This is a day of enormous joy and relief for Emily Hand and her family,” he wrote. “An innocent child who was lost has now been found and returned, and we breathe a massive sigh of relief. Our prayers have been answered.”

Levy tore into Varadkar, a long-time critic of Israel. “Emily Hand wasn’t ‘lost’,’” he wrote, his disdain dripping from the screen. “She was brutally abducted by the death squads that massacred her neighbours. She wasn’t ‘found’. Hamas knew where she was all along, and cynically held her as a hostage. And Hamas didn’t answer your prayers. It answered Israel’s military pressure.”

Not all of Levy’s viral moments have reflected in-the-moment anger. On TikTok, where he posts videos with the help of a social media team, he has tapped into trends, joking about what’s out for 2024 – “Calling to globalise the intifada and a ceasefire at the same time; the math isn’t mathing,” he said – and producing a riff on a famous scene from the movie Love Actually for Christmas.

Levy has fans in the Knesset, too. On Sunday, after the report first emerged that he could be pushed out, Zeev Elkin, the National Unity Party member who heads the subcommittee of external affairs and advocacy, addressed a letter to the head of the public diplomacy office.

“The importance of hasbara for the state of Israel in light of the war is self-evident. In our subcommittee meetings, the name of Eylon Levy was raised, a spokesperson for the National Public Diplomacy Directorate, several times in positive contexts,” Elkin wrote before asking for clarification on Levy’s future employment and if “pressure from outside forces” was being used to end his government tenure.

Sara Netanyahu looms large in Israeli politics, where she’s believed to take extreme measures behind the scenes to protect her husband, sometimes in seeming opposition to his interests. She recently made headlines for reportedly accusing hostages’ families of bolstering Hamas by pressuring Netanyahu to seek an immediate hostage-for-prisoner deal no matter the cost.

While Levy’s role appears to be safe for now, the controversy and the fact that it surprised no-one remains meaningful, Kowaz said.

“What’s most problematic is the entire functioning of the government being driven by the political and personal interests of Netanyahu,” he said.

As for Levy, he returned this week from a quick trip to England, where he helped mark 100 days since 7 October by speaking in Trafalgar Square. He has continued posting without interruption, and last Tuesday, he was in front of the TV cameras for the Israeli government’s daily English-language press briefing for the first time in a week.

1 Comment

  1. yitzchak

    March 1, 2024 at 9:57 am

    didn’t know Sara was part of the cabinet?Perhaps she can encourage her son to sign up?
    Didnt know he was given Yeshiva leave?
    Is he still a spokesman for the Israel Govt?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Exit mobile version