Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

‘No shame, no decency, no clue,’ Dana Bash tells Code Pink protester

The “CNN” anchor also slammed the anti-Israel group for desecrating a synagogue by posing as congregants.

Dana Bash
Dana Bash at a “victory rally” following the 2012 New Hampshire Republican primary in Manchester, N.H., for Ron Paul, Jan. 10, 2012. Credit: Gage Skidmore/Creative Commons.

Dana Bash, chief CNN political correspondent, denounced Code Pink after the anti-Israel group posted video footage of one of its members accosting Bash at Main Line Reform Temple, in the Philadelphia area, where she spoke on Thursday.

“What is going on now is a holocaust,” the Code Pink protester told Bash, accusing the Jewish CNN anchor of being “a mouthpiece for the genocide in Gaza.”

“I’m not here to debate,” Bash says in a video that Code Pink posted. “I will just say one thing. Being anti-Israel, anti-Israeli government, is not antisemitic.” When the agitator says that the protests on campus are anti-Israel, Bash asks if the woman has been to the protests outside her house, “where they call me ‘Zionist trash’ and call for the intifada against me?”

Bash, who co-anchors State of the Union and anchors Inside Politics on the network, later wrote, “You came to a place of Jewish worship, stood on the bimah, near the holy Torah scroll, and pretended to be congregants.”

“You have no shame, no decency, and no clue what you’re talking about,” she added.

Matt Brooks, CEO of the Republican Jewish Coalition, wrote that he was sorry that the anchor “had to be verbally confronted by the lunatic fringe at the shul where I grew up and was bar mitzvah-ed.”

Jill Stein, who ran for U.S. president as part of the Green Party, agreed with the protester.

The newly released State Archives trace the Israeli response from the Air France hijacking to the successful hostage rescue in Uganda.
Panelists at the JNS Summit argued that Israel must expand its domestic military capabilities while continuing strategic cooperation with the United States.
“Anti-Zionism can be a framework for justifying anti-Jewish hostility,” Rafaela Dancygier, of Princeton University, told the N.J. Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
A board member at the Orthodox synagogue told the FBI that members began attending services less frequently after Kevin Charles Pyles allegedly targeted the synagogue in separate July and August 2025 incidents.
The Senate rejected a resolution calling for the removal of U.S. forces from the war against Iran after U.S. President Donald Trump hammered Senate Republicans for approving a similar measure the day before.
“When someone uses the N-word on campus, no one thinks about free speech. No one talks about, ‘Let’s understand what they’re thinking. Let’s have a discussion,’” Rep. Randy Fine said. “But somehow when it came to Jews, everyone wanted to rediscover the idea of free speech.”
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.