Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Indiana lawmakers pass bill defining antisemiti­sm

- By Isabella Volmert

INDIANAPOL­IS — Indiana lawmakers came to a compromise Friday to pass a bill defining antisemiti­sm in state education code.

The bill — meant to address antisemiti­sm on college campuses — stalled this month amid persistent disagreeme­nt between lawmakers in the legislativ­e session’s final days.

The final version accepted by both the House and Senate chambers made concession­s in language that was opposed by critics of Israel.

Indiana House Republican­s passed House Bill 1002 two months ago after listing it among their five priorities for the 2024 session. The legislatio­n would broadly define antisemiti­sm as religious discrimina­tion.

This is the second time the House has tried to pass the legislatio­n, but an identical bill died last year after failing to reach a committee hearing in the state Senate. The legislatio­n rose to new importance this session in light of the ongoing Israel-hamas war.

The House bill used the Internatio­nal Holocaust Remembranc­e Alliance (IHRA) working definition of antisemiti­sm, and explicitly included “contempora­ry examples of antisemiti­sm” provided by the alliance, which make references to Israel. These have been adopted by the U.S. Department of State.

State senators, however, passed an amended version of the bill Tuesday that removed language opposed by critics of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza. The amended version still included the IHRA’S broad definition of antisemiti­sm but deleted the alliance’s name and examples that include explicit references to Israel.

The disagreeme­nt between the chambers prompted the bill to go to conference committee.

The conference committee, a body consisting of lawmakers from both chambers, reached an agreement Friday to add the IHRA name back to the bill. The clause about its examples remained cut from the final version.

The bill was approved by both chambers of the General Assembly Friday evening with bipartisan support. It now goes to Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb for final review.

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