Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

New UK bill to prevent government councils from boycotting Israel

One British official does not want local governments to be declaring “their own foreign policy.”

Communities secretary Michael Gove. Credit: www.gov.uk.
Communities secretary Michael Gove. Credit: www.gov.uk.

A new bill soon to be introduced is set to deal a blow against the BDS movement in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Communities Secretary Michael Gove will introduce legislation to prevent councils in the United Kingdom from declaring boycotts of Israel. This has been an initiative the Conservative Party first announced in its 2019 manifesto, and Gove is described by the Financial Times as “determined” to pass the bill.

Gove previously said: “The BDS campaign is designed for only one purpose: to attack and delegitimize the State of Israel and the idea that there should be a Jewish state at all.”

Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister, shares Gove’s focus on passing the legislation.

Inspiring the effort were the city councils of Lancaster and Leicester, which both passed boycott policies. Last year, the city council for Hertfordshire County was pressured to boycott Israel but the efforts to pass the law were thwarted.

“Vang is currently riding a wave of progressive energy that has been deciding Democratic primaries across the country,” Dan Schnur, a political science lecturer, told JNS.
Preliminary data for 2026 suggests a volume of antisemitism that is second only to 2023, during which the Oct. 7 attacks occurred, B’nai Brith Canada said.
Only 93 members of the Democratic caucus opposed an amendment to end aid Israel in a vote that split the Democratic leadership and further revealed one of the sharpest divides in politics on the American left.
The law negates the binding nature of legal opinions and grants the government the authority to represent its own position in court even if it differs from that of the AG.
Republican lawmakers on the House Committee on Education and Workforce grilled the leaders of three public medical schools over their past diversity, equity and inclusion efforts.
Despite ongoing security concerns, families across the United States chose to send their children on the four-week educational trip to strengthen their connection to Israel.