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New York state senators propose laws to counter local antisemitism

“This is the single most pressing issue we are faced with,” said Senate Republican Leader Rob Ortt.

Pro-Palestinian Protest in New York City
Anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian activists in New York City, May 11, 2021. Credit: Ron Adar/Shutterstock.

The New York State Senate and Assembly Republican Conferences conducted a press conference this week to call attention to a series of proposed bills dubbed “Hate Has Consequences.”

“Amidst a dramatic rise in antisemitism, and the increase of hateful speech and rhetoric on college campuses here in New York and throughout the nation, it is imperative that the legislature act to protect Jewish New Yorkers,” Senate Republican Leader Rob Ortt said on Wednesday.

Potential new laws could stop state funding for colleges that fail to ban pro-terrorist student groups; create new crimes for those wearing masks while committing assaults; and sanction schools that fail to stop professors from supporting terrorist groups.

Calling the threat of antisemitism “the single most pressing issue we are faced with,” Ortt said that he was “disappointed in the lack of action by New York Democrats.”

The proposed measures come as hate crimes continue in New York City, particularly after the Oct. 7 terrorist attacks by Hamas in southern Israel. Criminals broke the window of the Rothschild TLV, a kosher restaurant on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, on May 15.

“Despite the attacks on our coverage from opposing directions on a near-daily basis, we will not let critics or advocacy campaigns deter us from such independent reporting,” a spokesman for the paper told JNS.
“These are not just numbers on a page but are lived experience of all Jewish Americans,” Rep. Brad Knott said, of Jew-hatred, on the House floor.
“Abe believed that hearts could change,” said Rabbi Elliot Cosgrove, of Park Avenue Synagogue.
“The accused was identified as a result of tips received from the public,” police said.
It comes as the Israeli Foreign Ministry claimed that the paper published a “shameful attack” on the Jewish state before the release of a report on sexual violence on Oct. 7.