Ron DeSantis
“From the River to the Sea” is a call for a second Holocaust, the Florida governor said.
Both pieces of legislation are slated to go into effect in Florida on July 1.
Florida’s governor and the University of Florida’s president spoke out against the hate visible at academic institutions nationwide.
A spokeswoman said the investment firm is “working with our analysts and clients to implement each of the remaining experts’ recommendations swiftly—before the end of this year.”
“Over the coming months, they will have a tough decision to make—pack up and leave, or stay and endure continued hatred,” the governor said.
“Security technology evolves, just as the threats to the community evolve,” Alex Silverstein of the local Jewish Federation told JNS.
Gov. Ron DeSantis says the state will “welcome them with open arms.”
“Joe Biden will say he supports Israel and then they do nothing but try to kneecap them every step of the way,” said Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
“The last thing we need to do is to tell Israel what to do. The only thing we should be doing is supporting them and eliminating Hamas,” said Nikki Haley, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.
“You’re not going to scare me with a ‘Day of Hate.’ You’re not going to scare our community,” said Maury Litwack, founder of the Teach Coalition.
“Any one of them is better than Joe Biden,” Norm Coleman, national chairman of the RJC and a former U.S. senator, told JNS of all the Republican presidential candidates.
Randy Fine, a Florida state representative, wrote in an op-ed that he is now supporting former President Donald Trump.