Esther Kim Varet, one of the Democratic challengers running against Rep. Young Kim (R-CA), is worried about her party’s growing tolerance of extremism

Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Hammer Museum
Esther Kim Varet attends Hammer Museum's 18th Annual Gala in the Garden on October 08, 2022 in Los Angeles, California.
Esther Kim Varet, an art gallery owner mounting an outsider bid as a Democrat to unseat Rep. Young Kim (R-CA), said she wants to help repair and strengthen a Democratic Party she said has been severely undermined by rampant anti-Israel activism.
Anti-Israel extremism and its proponents have “really decimated the Democratic Party,” Kim Varet, whose husband and children are Jewish, told Jewish Insider in a recent interview. She said that anti-Israel activists in the party are trying to divide Democrats at a time when unity is more important than ever.
She said their efforts have pushed Jews toward the Republican Party, which she argued is no true friend to the Jews, describing it as replete with “antisemitic Zionists.”
“We need to rebuild from the center out right now,” Kim Varet said. “We need to remember that being a Zionist is not a partisan issue. It never has been and it should not be.”
She argued that Jewish values, like tikkun olam, are at the heart of the Democratic Party, because Jews have for so long been a core Democratic constituency. She said that she wants to advocate for the party to refocus on those values.
Kim Varet’s connection to Israel dates back to her early 20s, when she and a friend backpacked through the Middle East for four months. She said that she saw stark differences between the authoritarian regimes in Syria, Turkey, Jordan and Egypt and the democratic government in Israel, and said, “my priority as an American is to do whatever it takes to preserve democracy.”
“These extremist groups want to exterminate my Jewish children simply because we believe that Jews also deserve a homeland. That’s the definition of Zionist,” Kim Varet said. “Would you rejoice if a pro-Palestinian terrorist gunned down, on American soil, my two Jewish children or my Jewish husband on the streets?”
Kim Varet, who spoke to JI in the immediate aftermath of the Capital Jewish Museum shooting, said it had hit particularly close to home because she had spoken recently at another American Jewish Committee event, about antisemitism in the art world, and because of the danger that antisemitism poses for her own family and children.
She said she was deeply disturbed by the response she saw to the shooting online, with the “‘Free Palestine’ left justifying the slaughter.”
“These extremist groups want to exterminate my Jewish children simply because we believe that Jews also deserve a homeland. That’s the definition of Zionist,” Kim Varet said. “Would you rejoice if a pro-Palestinian terrorist gunned down, on American soil, my two Jewish children or my Jewish husband on the streets?”
She also emphasized that, in the wake of World War II, Israel was a critical safe haven for the Jewish community when it had nowhere else to go, “which is something that every human should have a right to.”
Kim Varet, who grew up in an evangelical Christian Korean household in Texas going to a Christian school, said that she did not fully understand the richness of Jewish culture or the challenges of antisemitism when she and her now-husband first began dating, and has come to discover them over their time together.
“That became critical, for me, to be able to effectively talk to others about what certain kinds of language might feel [like] to a Jewish person, how that lands, how that gets internalized, how that gets processed,” she said.
“People don’t want to admit it, but I think for a lot of marginalized communities, they perceive Jews just to be wealthy, and they choose to just read them as wealthy instead of human, and they refuse to [acknowledge] their pain,” Kim Varet added.
She argued that her background can give her a unique perspective and strong voice to the fight against antisemitism. She argued that the Jewish community needs non-Jewish advocates who will step up and fight for it because of their own convictions, without receiving any political donations from AIPAC — which she criticized for supporting “antisemitic Zionists” in the GOP.
Kim Varet’s husband, Joseph Varet, is a descendant of the Rosenwald family, a founding member of the Sears Roebuck department store chain. He’s a relative of the renowned philanthropist Julius Rosenwald, and their son shares that name. Her family continues to operate a philanthropic foundation, which has turned its focus to Israel-related causes since Oct. 7.
Post-Oct. 7, Kim Varet and her husband have worked with the Israel Children’s Fund, supporting hundreds of children who lost parents or siblings in the attack. They have personally hosted dozens of those children in their California home, flying them out to the area for rest and relaxation, taking them to sites like Disneyland.
She and her family also recently traveled to Israel to visit some of the families who had stayed with them, Kim Varet’s third visit to Israel.
“I could see where the fractures started happening in my own world, and then I could see that it was mirrored on a larger scale in the Democratic Party,” Kim Varet said.
“For me, it’s always been like this. Walk the walk, don’t just have opinions about things,” Kim Varet said. “Also very similar to why I’m running because … I need to. I feel so much despair around Trump. I’m not going to despair. I’m going to do, and I’m going to work.”
In her professional life, she’s also seen how antisemitism has rocked the art world since Oct. 7 — many artists came out strongly against Israel, using slogans like “From the river to the sea,” while many of the collectors that Kim Varet works with are Jewish. She said she saw the hurt that such rhetoric exacted on the Jewish community.
She said she saw some of the artists reject out of hand accusations of antisemitism and refuse to examine their own rhetoric. “I could see where the fractures started happening in my own world, and then I could see that it was mirrored on a larger scale in the Democratic Party,” Kim Varet said.
Kim Varet said she never anticipated entering politics, but said that she saw the values she cares about under threat under the Trump administration, and believes that the incumbent in the seat, Kim, is a Christian nationalist extremist who could be vulnerable in the upcoming election.
She said she had early conversations with the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and other groups about the possibility of flipping the Orange County swing seat, a top Democratic target. She’s been endorsed by the political arm of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus.
“I think we all felt really crappy after the election, if you’re a Democrat. I was like, ‘I’m gonna just go do something. I’m going to go flip the seat,’” Kim Varet said, adding that she’s channeling her “rage” at the unified Republican federal government toward her congressional bid.
“I’m fighting because you’re scared,” she said she’s telling prospective constituents.
A number of other candidates have also entered the race including the 2024 Democratic general election candidate, Joe Kerr; former local school board member Christina Gagnier; nonprofit leader and entrepreneur Nina Linh; and small business owner Paula Swift.
Kim Varet said her personal network from the art and philanthropic world can help her match the incumbent’s fundraising prowess. She raised more than $1 million in the first months of her campaign — placing her in rarified air among Democratic challengers nationwide.
“If I can figure out how to raise the money to compete against all her dirty money, then I have a fair shot here. And this district just hasn’t been able to produce anybody that has the network to do that,” Kim Varet said.
She said she wants to help support the American dream that her parents and grandparents — who fled North Korea — were able to pursue, having seen the hardships that her young employees, most of them first and second generation immigrants, have faced in making ends meet.
She said some consultants had urged her to aim for local office first, but she responded, “it’s 2025. It’s a freaking emergency situation. You think I want to be doing this? This is a call to action … I don’t need this job. This is not a great job … I have a really comfortable life, but at this point of my life, I am too educated, too privileged and too comfortable to not do anything for everybody else.”