The Jerusalem Post

Father of slain IDF soldier challenges Georgia Democratic lawmaker

- • By GREG BLUESTEIN

The father of a woman from the Atlanta suburb of Dunwoody who was murdered in November while serving as an Israeli Border Police officer is challengin­g a Democratic lawmaker who abstained from voting on a measure aimed at combating antisemiti­sm.

David Lubin said he had decided to run against Sally Harrell, a state senator, in the Democratic Party’s May primary after she criticized the antisemiti­sm measure and then did not vote on it.

“She showed who she was that day by not voting for the bill,” he told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “She’s not representi­ng her constituen­ts. It’s hard to go to bed at night and think that our senator didn’t support tougher hate-crime laws.”

Lubin’s 20-year-old daughter, Sgt. Rose Ida Lubin, was killed during a knife attack near the Old City of Jerusalem while on duty shortly after the Israel-Hamas war erupted.

After her death, Lubin became deeply involved in urging lawmakers to pass House Bill 30, which defines antisemiti­sm as part of the state’s Hate Crimes Law.

He had pressed Harrell to back the measure when she invited his family to be recognized by the Legislatur­e earlier this year, he said, adding that her abstention underscore­d how “disconnect­ed” she is from her constituen­ts.”

Gov. Brian Kemp signed the measure into law in January after both chambers passed it with overwhelmi­ng bipartisan support.

But it was no simple legislativ­e fight. The measure faced criticism from opponents who worried it would curtail free-speech rights or censor criticism of Israel. It took intense lobbying, including from prominent Jewish and evangelica­l leaders, to push it across the finish line.

Harrell, who represents a Dunwoody-based district with a significan­t Jewish population, surprised backers of the measure when she invoked the younger Lubin’s death and expressed criticism of the measure before sidesteppi­ng a vote.

If lawmakers were to define antisemiti­sm, she said in an interview, then other groups that experience hatred, such as Muslims who face Islamophob­ia, should also get added legal protection­s.

“I think if we had both at the same time, both groups would have felt heard, and it would have decreased the amount of hate,” Harrell said of the measure, which passed the Senate 44-6.

Harrell was elected in 2018 amid a wave of Democratic gains in the suburbs, and she has easily staved off challenger­s since then. She will enter the primary with incumbency status and a financial edge. Campaign finance records show Harrell amassed about $265,000 – a considerab­le war chest for a state legislator.

“Primaries allow for substantiv­e discussion­s on important issues and make for better candidates,” Harrell said. “I look forward to completing the current legislativ­e session so I can spend more time in conversati­on with the people of Senate 40.”

Lubin, a constructi­on executive, enters what is expected to be a low-turnout race with advantages of his own, including an endorsemen­t from state Rep. Esther Panitch, the only Jewish member of the State Legislatur­e.

Panitch, who co-sponsored the antisemiti­sm law, called Lubin a “man of great integrity and resilience who now has a platform to help others.”

“He is a moderate Democrat and would be a great, stable representa­tive of this Senate district,” she said.

Lubin acknowledg­ed he faces long odds challengin­g an incumbent in a primary. But it was a fight he could not shirk, he said in an interview.

“When Rose died, I woke up and said that I have to learn from my daughter,” he said. “She was never afraid to take risks. I know I have to take risks, and I have to serve, like she did. “I can’t sit idly by anymore.” (The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS)

 ?? (Jason Getz/The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS) ?? STATE SEN. Sally Harrell speaks in the Georgia State Legislatur­e last year. David Lubin said he had decided to run against Harrell after she criticized an antisemiti­sm measure and then did not vote on it.
(Jason Getz/The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/TNS) STATE SEN. Sally Harrell speaks in the Georgia State Legislatur­e last year. David Lubin said he had decided to run against Harrell after she criticized an antisemiti­sm measure and then did not vote on it.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel