Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro wrote in a new book that during his vetting by Kamala Harris’s team as a potential vice presidential candidate for the 2024 US election, he was asked by her team whether he had at any time “been a double agent for Israel.”
Excerpts from Shapiro’s book “Where We Keep the Light” were reported on by The New York Times and The Atlantic on Sunday. The book will be released on January 27.
Shapiro, who is Jewish, recalled being highly offended by the question by former White House counsel Dana Remus (“Was she kidding?”) and intensely uneasy with the general process, which included more questions regarding his positions that have been generally supportive of Israel, according to the book.
“Have you ever communicated with an undercover agent of Israel?” Remus asked, according to Shapiro. “If they were undercover, I responded, how the hell would I know?”
Additionally, Shapiro said he was asked if he would apologize for comments criticizing antisemitism at anti-Israel protests on university campuses that had erupted that year due to the war in Gaza.
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“I believe in free speech, and I’ll defend it with all I’ve got,” Shapiro said. “Most of the speech on campus, even that which I disagreed with, was peaceful and constitutionally protected. But some wasn’t peaceful.”

Charred wood trim and brick are visible at the residence of the state’s Governor Josh Shapiro in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, on April 13, 2025, during Passover. (AP Photo/Marc Levy)
He wrote that the fact he was asked these questions “said a lot about some of the people around [Harris].”
“I wondered whether these questions were being posed to just me — the only Jewish guy in the running — or if everyone who had not held a federal office was being grilled about Israel in the same way,” the book read.
“These sessions were completely professional and businesslike,” Shapiro wrote. “But I just had a knot in my stomach through all of it.”
During the vetting process, Shapiro faced an aggressive campaign from far-left and anti-Israel activists, who branded him “Genocide Josh” and warned Harris against picking him.
Remus and a representative for Harris did not respond to The Times’s requests for comment.
Also in the book, Shapiro recounted that his wife, Lori, voiced opposition to his joining the Harris campaign during a phone call.
“I am in a Canadian Walmart right now. Maybe not the ideal time for this conversation,” Shapiro recalled her telling him. “I don’t think we are ready to do this. It’s not the right time for our family. And it’s not on our terms.”

Then-assistant to the president and White House counsel Dana Remus, left, and assistant to the president and deputy chief of staff Jen O’Malley Dillon, right, walk toward Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in Washington, DC, July 13, 2021. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
Eventually, Shapiro pulled out of the running. When he asked to talk to Harris about his decision, her representatives told Shapiro that “the VP would not handle bad news well and that I shouldn’t push.”
Harris later picked Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her running mate, and the two went on to lose the general election to Donald Trump.
Shapiro’s spokesperson told The Times that he “wrote a very personal book about his faith, his family, and the people of Pennsylvania he has learned from and fought for throughout his life in public service. The 2024 election is one small part of his much broader story.”
Shapiro, 52, a traditional pro-Israel Democrat, will run for a second term as Pennsylvania governor. He is also a likely 2028 presidential candidate.
Shapiro has visited Israel often and firmly backed its right to self-defense since Hamas’s invasion and slaughter in southern Israel on October 7, 2023. He has also called Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “one of the worst leaders of all time,” saying that the prime minister was steering Israel in the wrong direction.
Last year on Passover, the governor’s mansion was set on fire. Shapiro and members of his family had to be awakened and evacuated, but no one was injured in the fire.
Arsonist Cody Balmer told police he believed Shapiro was encouraging the war in Gaza, and that he “needs to stop having my friends killed,” and “our people have been put through too much by that monster.”
JTA contributed to this report.
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