The Jerusalem Post

Antisemiti­sm coordinato­r gets bipartisan support in Congress

- • By RON KAMPEAS/JTA

WASHINGTON – Republican­s and Democrats in Congress are uniting to pass a bill that would create a national coordinato­r of the fight against antisemiti­sm – though it faces competitio­n from another Republican-backed bill that seeks to define antisemiti­sm.

The bipartisan Countering Antisemiti­sm Act, introduced last week, is meant to advance President Joe Biden’s national strategy to fight antisemiti­sm, rolled out nearly a year ago. The plan focused on action across the executive branch, demanding reforms in federal agencies from the Education Department to the Agricultur­e Department.

The national coordinato­r would help see through those reforms. The coordinato­r would also receive an annual assessment of violent antisemiti­sm nationwide from law enforcemen­t and intelligen­ce agencies. The position would be a counterpar­t to the State Department’s antisemiti­sm envoy, who focuses on anti-Jewish bigotry abroad.

Rep. Kathy Manning said that the bill was in the works before the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war on October 7, but that the ensuing rise in antisemiti­c incidents and rhetoric made it more urgent.

“We have seen it spread on social media, the protests on college campuses are beyond what anyone expected,” she said.

Manning, a North Carolina Democrat, is one of three lead sponsors of the bill, along with

Rep. Chris Smith, a New Jersey Republican; Sen. Jacky Rosen, a Nevada Democrat; and Sen. James Lankford, an Oklahoma Republican. Manning and Rosen are Jewish.

But that is not the only legislatio­n seeking to fight antisemiti­sm. One day after the bipartisan bill was introduced, Republican Rep. Anthony D’Esposito of New York introduced legislatio­n on how to define antisemiti­sm.

That bill wades into a long-running debate over the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance’s (IHRA) working definition of antisemiti­sm. The IHRA definition has been endorsed by hundreds of countries, local government­s, universiti­es, and corporatio­ns, but has drawn criticism because it includes certain forms of criticism of Israel, such as calling it a “racist endeavor.”

D’Esposito’s bill would codify the IHRA definition across US law, including in jury instructio­ns and applicatio­ns of civil rights laws. Talking points from D’Esposito’s office, circulated by the National Jewish Advocacy Center, which backs the bill, said it does not target legitimate Israel criticism.

“The definition makes clear that ‘criticism of Israel similar to that leveled against any other country cannot be regarded as antisemiti­c,’ and that none of the examples, even the ones about Israel, are automatica­lly antisemiti­c; just that they ‘could, taking into account the overall context,’ be antisemiti­c,” the

talking points said.

The D’Esposito bill, while endorsed only by Republican­s, expands on a separate bipartisan bill that was introduced shortly after October 7 but has yet to be advanced. That bill would codify the IHRA definition when enforcing Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which denies federal funding to institutio­ns that discrimina­te against several protected classes and has emerged as a preferred tool of activists fighting antisemiti­sm and anti-Zionism on college campuses.

Following Biden’s rollout of the plan to counter antisemiti­sm last May, a number of right-leaning Jewish advocacy groups criticized it for citing both the IHRA definition as well as another one, called the Nexus definition. Nexus

places a greater focus on parsing when anti-Israel criticism verges into antisemiti­sm.

MANNING’S BIPARTISAN bill seeks to avoid that debate. A press release from her office included endorsemen­ts from an array of organizati­ons that prefer the IHRA definition. But it also has the backing of the group of scholars who wrote the Nexus definition.

The American Jewish Committee (AJC), which supports the IHRA definition, will be launching a campaign on Tuesday called Voices Against Antisemiti­sm in which it calls on constituen­ts to ask their representa­tives to support the bill. The groups endorsing the bill focused on what they said was the importance of creating the coordinato­r position, at a time

of rising antisemiti­sm.

“Given the unpreceden­ted surge of antisemiti­sm in the US following the October 7th terrorist attacks on Israel, this legislatio­n is a significan­t step in protecting American Jewry and combating the oldest of hatreds,” said William Daroff, the CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizati­ons.

That message was echoed by Jonathan Jacoby, the director of the Nexus Leadership Project.

“The disturbing rise in antisemiti­c incidents nationwide urgently demands the comprehens­ive, multi-pronged effort laid out in the US National Strategy to Counter Antisemiti­sm,” he said in a statement.

Kevin Rachlin, Nexus’ Washington director, said the need for a domestic antisemiti­sm coordinato­r made the bill an easy sell for the group. But he noted other positives, including that the bill says that the IHRA definition is non-binding.

Rachlin said the bill also would please liberals because it focuses as much on right-wing antisemiti­sm as it does on the Left, at a time when he says many Republican­s are ignoring the threat from the Right.

Those “looking for actions to actually counter antisemiti­sm, the tachles of it,” should be satisfied by the bill, Rachlin said, using a Yiddish word roughly meaning “bottom line.” He said the bill is “pushing back on this rising tide from the Right and what’s happening on the Left as well.”

Manning said she realized early on that she needed language in the bill to address how both Republican­s and Democrats see the threat of antisemiti­sm.

“The language we have in the bill was very carefully negotiated,” she said. “The interestin­g thing about the compositio­n of the Congress right now is if you actually want to get something passed, you have to have something that you can get Republican­s in the House willing to lead, and Democrats in the Senate willing to lead. So that calls for a truly bipartisan approach.”

In that vein, D’Esposito’s bill, backed only by Republican­s, has no chance on its own of becoming law. But parts of it may be wrapped into Manning’s legislatio­n as an amendment – an occasional outcome when multiple bills address the same topic.

The Manning-Rosen bill may still face controvers­y: A substantia­l portion is devoted to combating antisemiti­sm on American campuses, and activists on the Left worry that the fight against campus antisemiti­sm is sometimes used as a way to shut down criticism of Israel.

Lara Friedman, the president of the Foundation for Middle East Peace, noted on X that the bill’s section on higher education cites a 2019 executive order on antisemiti­sm by President Donald Trump.

“That EO, as a reminder, centers on enforcing the IHRA definition, including its examples as part of Title VI, as a means of repressing/punishing/chilling criticism and activism targeting Israel and/or Zionism on US campuses,” she said.

Emma Saltzberg, the US strategic director for the Diaspora Alliance, a progressiv­e Jewish organizati­on that seeks to combat antisemiti­sm and opposes the IHRA definition, said the Manning-Rosen bill is better than D’Esposito’s.

But she said her group could not endorse it in part because the coordinato­r position would not be subject to congressio­nal confirmati­on.

“This coordinato­r position, unlike the special envoy to monitor and combat antisemiti­sm, would just be a presidenti­al appointmen­t, which means that there are no formal mechanisms for Democratic [Party] input into that decision,” she said. “And we can only imagine what a Trump administra­tion might do with that kind of appointmen­t.”

 ?? (Kathy Manning for Congress/JTA) ?? KATHY MANNING defeated four candidates in a Democratic primary for Congress, winning 48% of the vote.
(Kathy Manning for Congress/JTA) KATHY MANNING defeated four candidates in a Democratic primary for Congress, winning 48% of the vote.

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