The Jerusalem Post

Cuomo’s anti-BDS order seen as a game changer by both sides

Pro-Israel group: There’s a variety of tools to combat BDS, and we need all of them • Opponents: Move smacks of McCarthyis­m, violates First Amendment

- • By BEN SALES

NEW YORK (JTA) – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s executive order opposing BDS shouldn’t have made a splash – but it did.

A handful of US states had already passed similar measures opposing the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel. So had the New York State Senate – though the State Assembly version has been stalled since last year. Cuomo’s order, signed on Sunday, was merely supposed to speed up the “tedious” voting process, as he said at the signing ceremony that day, just before New York’s annual Celebrate Israel Parade.

“We want to take immediate action because we want the world to know, we want Israel to know, we’re on their side,” Cuomo said. “If you boycott against Israel, New York will boycott you. If you divert revenues from Israel, New York will divert revenues from you. If you sanction Israel, New York will sanction you.”

Like anti-BDS measures passed in other states, Cuomo’s order bans New York state agencies and department­s from investing in companies or groups that, as a policy, promote or engage in boycotts, divestment or sanctions against Israel. The order also requires the state to draw up a public list of companies that engage in or promote BDS.

Cuomo’s order stands out, however, as it enacts opposition to BDS in the fourth-most populous US state (with about 20 million inhabitant­s) – and the home to the largest number of Jews in the country (about 7 percent of New Yorkers, including 13 percent of New York City residents). And it places Cuomo, a prominent governor and national figure, at the center of the American debate over Israel.

Praised by pro-Israel groups, the order has engendered backlash in the left-wing press and among anti-Israel activists. Publicatio­ns lambasted it as “McCarthyis­m” and said it violates First Amendment rights. Jewish Voice for Peace, which supports BDS, is organizing a protest of the order this week outside Cuomo’s office.

Supporters and opponents of the measure both say it marks a tipping point in the battle over BDS in the United States. Backers say Cuomo is opening a new avenue to fight BDS in the absence of legislativ­e approval. Opponents say the order is an unconstitu­tional act aimed at political pandering.

“There are a variety of tools to combat BDS, and we need all of them,” said Ethan Felson, executive director of the Israel Action Network. “New York is a large economy, and ensuring that there is a wall between expenditur­es covered under the executive action and the BDS movement is a game changer.”

Seven states – including Alabama, Colorado and Illinois – have passed measures like New York’s, according to Americans for Peace Now. Lawmakers in more than 20 states have proposed similar legislatio­n. But in Cuomo’s executive order, pro-Israel activists see a precedent that can work where bills are stalled.

On Sunday, Cuomo encouraged his fellow governors to follow his lead, comparing the order to New York’s enactment of samesex marriage in 2011, four years before it was legal nationally.

“We’re already seeing a lot of states attempt to pass antiBDS legislatio­n,” said Noam Gilboord, Israel and internatio­nal affairs director for the New York Jewish Community Relations Council. “What this executive order does is open another channel for enacting such legislatio­n should there be difficulti­es doing so through the legislatur­e.”

But Cuomo has also drawn criticism for enacting a measure his state legislatur­e did not pass. Rebecca Vilkomerso­n, executive director of Jewish Voice for Peace, said Cuomo “is trying to hold on to a consensus that doesn’t exist anymore” in support of Israel.

Wayne Barrett, a former Village Voice journalist who has covered Cuomo for decades, said the governor’s move could be seen as underminin­g his allies in New York’s legislativ­e branch.

“What would be feeding a backlash is that he did it when a Democratic [legislatur­e] wouldn’t do it,” Barrett said. “He’s essentiall­y overriding his own party’s legislativ­e leaders.”

Opponents of the executive order believe their best chance could be in court. They cite legal experts who have said the measure unconstitu­tionally infringes on First Amendment rights: Because boycotts are a form of free speech, some experts argue, New York’s state government cannot deny government contracts to companies engaging in boycotts. Activists have also objected to the public list of companies that engage in BDS, with some comparing it to McCarthyis­m.

“The state cannot penalize individual­s or entities on the basis of their free expression, and political boycotts are a form of free expression,” Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said. “Creating a government blacklist that imposes state sanctions based on political beliefs raises First Amendment concerns, and this is no exception.”

Eugene Kontorovic­h, a Northweste­rn University law professor who has consulted with anti-BDS groups, said the measure is mostly constituti­onal because it is akin to statutes prohibitin­g discrimina­tion against gays and lesbians. He added that the government needs a list of companies to execute the order, and that making that list public is more transparen­t than keeping it secret.

But he cautioned that Cuomo’s order may still run afoul of free-speech laws by banning investment in companies that merely advocate for boycotts but don’t engage in them.

“The government is not tied to any set of progressiv­e rules,” Kontorovic­h said. “They see this as a fundamenta­lly unacceptab­le discrimina­tion.”

 ?? (Kevin P. Coughlin/Office of the NY Governor) ?? GOV. ANDREW CUOMO signs an executive order on Sunday for a state government boycott of firms that boycott Israel.
(Kevin P. Coughlin/Office of the NY Governor) GOV. ANDREW CUOMO signs an executive order on Sunday for a state government boycott of firms that boycott Israel.

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