The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

House passes broad measure condemning hate

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WASHINGTON — The House on Thursday passed a measure broadly condemning hate, as Democrats seek to move past a controvers­y over alleged anti-Semitic comments from freshman Rep. Ilhan Omar.

The resolution condemns anti-Semitism and anti-Muslim bias in equal measure, a shift from a draft circulated Monday that rebuked only anti-Semitism. Neither mentions Omar, D-Minn., or her comments specifical­ly.

“It’s not about her,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said of Omar at a news conference. “It’s about these forms of hatred.”

Thursday’s vote reflected Democratic leaders’ concerns that the acrimoniou­s issue is overshadow­ing their legislativ­e agenda, including the expected passage today of a sweeping election and ethics reform bill.

But even the new resolution had problems. The vote was briefly delayed Thursday afternoon as House leaders made further changes to the resolution, broadening it again to acknowledg­e prejudice against even more minority groups.

Omar suggested last week that Israel’s supporters have an “allegiance to a foreign country,” remarks that angered some Democrats who saw them as hateful tropes and who pushed to condemn the freshman lawmaker. Her defenders argued that leadership was applying a double standard in singling out one of the two Muslim women in Congress.

The resolution posted Thursday indirectly repudiates Omar’s comments, saying that “accusation­s of dual loyalty generally have an insidious and pernicious history” and noting that such an accusation “constitute­s anti-Semitism because it suggests that Jewish citizens cannot be patriotic Americans and trusted neighbors.”

But it also includes language condemning anti-Muslim bigotry “as hateful expression­s of intoleranc­e that are contrary to the values and aspiration­s of the United States,” and condemns incidents of mosque bombings and planned domestic terrorist attacks targeting Muslim communitie­s.

Omar, a Somali-American immigrant, has spoken about religiousl­y motivated verbal attacks.

The decision to sanction Omar for her “allegiance” comments without mentioning the hatred she had faced infuriated many Democrats and prompted a backlash at the initial plans to condemn anti-Semitism specifical­ly.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., suggested last week that Israel’s supporters have an “allegiance to a foreign country.”
ERIN SCHAFF / NEW YORK TIMES Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., suggested last week that Israel’s supporters have an “allegiance to a foreign country.”

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