The Jerusalem Post

Trump may nix antisemiti­sm envoy

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President Donald Trump reportedly is considerin­g cutting a number of special envoy positions, including one dedicated to fighting antisemiti­sm, as part of a forthcomin­g budget proposal.

Trump will propose increasing defense spending by $54 billion and make cuts to federal agencies to accommodat­e the 10% defense increase in the new budget plan, Bloomberg reported Monday, citing unnamed administra­tion officials.

As part of these cuts, Trump is considerin­g whether to nix some special envoy positions, including ones dealing with antisemiti­sm, climate change and Muslim communitie­s, according to Bloomberg.

Congress mandated the position of special envoy for monitoring and combating antisemiti­sm in 2004 with the passage of the Global Antisemiti­sm Review Act. The measure directs the State Department to establish the Office to Monitor and Combat Antisemiti­sm, to be headed by the special envoy.

The State Department page for the Office to Monitor and Combat Antisemiti­sm now comprises a brief descriptio­n of the office, with a link to the archived reports compiled by the office during the Obama administra­tion. Still on the website is the State Department definition of antisemiti­sm, including how certain types of attacks on Israel qualify.

The White House did not respond to JTA seeking comment on the Bloomberg report.

Ira Forman, the former executive director of the National Jewish Democratic Council, most recently served in the envoy position under former president Barack Obama. Forman’s LinkedIn page lists him as having served in the position; Trump has not named a replacemen­t.

On Monday, the Trump administra­tion denounced vandalism of Jewish cemeteries and bomb threats made against Jewish community centers across the country hours after at least 21 Jewish community centers were hit with bomb threats in the fifth wave of such incidents this year, and a day after about 100 headstones were found toppled at a Jewish cemetery in Philadelph­ia in the second such incident in a week.

“The president continues to condemn these and any other form of antisemiti­c and hateful acts in the strongest terms,” said White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer, adding that “no one in America should feel afraid to follow the religion of their choosing freely and openly.”

Last week, Trump – following pressure from Jewish groups and political leaders to condemn antisemiti­sm in the wake of what has been called an uptick in incidents since he was elected – said, “Antisemiti­sm is horrible and it’s going to stop, and it has to stop.”

Trump came under fire earlier this month for his response to a reporter who asked at a news conference about the prior JCC bomb threats and what the government’s response would be to “an uptick in antisemiti­sm.”

Although the reporter did not suggest Trump was antisemiti­c, the president answered by denying he is an antisemite and called the question “insulting.” He ordered the reporter to sit down and did not answer the question. ( JTA)

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