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Virginia’s governor pushes for antisemitism to be designated a hate crime

Glenn Youngkin also calls for legislation to bar government involvement with businesses that boycott Israel.

Glenn Youngkin, “Parents and Education,” Virginia
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin hosts a discussion on “Parents and Education” on July 18, 2023. Credit: Flickr/Glenn Youngkin via Wikimedia Commons.

Virginia’s Gov. Glenn Youngkin, a Republican, spoke at the state’s general assembly on Jan. 12, urging legislators to go further in protecting the local Jewish community.

He suggested that the state make antisemitism a hate crime and that a bill to that end ensures that “all forms of antisemitism, not just religious bigotry, are treated as hate crimes under the law.”

Such a designation could mean that those who spray-paint swastikas, for example, be charged with a hate crime instead of vandalism.

Youngkin also called for legislation to bar government involvement with businesses that boycott Israel. “I want to challenge all of us, pass a bill which says the commonwealth of Virginia won’t do business with companies that boycott Israel.”

The governor issued an executive order with a six-point plan in October “to combat the increasing incidents and threats of antisemitism, and anti-religious and ethnic-based bigotry and violence in the Commonwealth.”

A 25-foot buffer zone around houses of worship would include a penalty for protesters who breach it, though the state assembly speaker said nothing has been agreed to yet.
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