Kathy Hochul
It is the first portrait to be added to the historic building in 125 years.
The town of Chester has previously been accused of discriminating against the ultra-Orthodox community.
“The darkest place right now is in the heart and soul of some individuals who perpetrate antisemitism and harm individuals who I represent with words, physical actions, with assaults, with messages on social media,” Governor Kathy Hochul said.
Governor Kathy Hochul’s Jewish Republican opponent in the state’s recent gubernatorial election, Rep. Lee Zeldin, had targeted her record on crime.
Jewish Republican Lee Zeldin says ‘very close margin’ proves New Yorkers ‘are hitting their breaking point’
Despite his loss to Governor Kathy Hochul, Zeldin’s message especially resonated with New York’s many Orthodox and Haredi neighborhoods, where increased crime usually also means a dramatic rise in anti-Semitic assaults on visible Jews and their property.
Hochul defeats Jewish Republican challenger Zeldin in New York gubernatorial race
Despite his loss, Rep. Lee Zeldin’s message especially resonated with the state’s many Orthodox and Haredi neighborhoods, where increased crime usually also means a dramatic rise in anti-Semitic assaults on visible Jews and their property.
Jewish voters at a Brooklyn polling station reached a consensus that Hochul didn’t walk the walk when it came to the community’s core issues.
NY Governor Kathy Hochul’s donors ‘panicking’ as Jewish Republican Lee Zeldin surges in polls
Zeldin closed in on Hochul’s formerly double-digit lead in the polls and even led in one poll conducted by the Trafalgar Group from Oct. 27-31.
New York Jewish voters divided on governor’s race
The focus is on crime, yeshivas as GOP’s Lee Zeldin seeks to close the gap.
Poll: Jewish Republican Lee Zeldin leads race for New York governor
A poll conducted by the Trafalgar Group from Oct. 27-31 finds that Zeldin would garner 48.4% of the vote if the election were held today, slightly more than Democratic incumbent Gov. Kathy Hochul at 47.6%.
Technology will store electricity as kinetic energy, “enabling peak-shaving and sustainable, reusable charge cycles.”
The new regulations authorize the state’s commissioner of education to conduct a survey and determine whether school districts in New York are meeting the requirements for teaching about the Holocaust, which has been mandatory since 1994.