Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

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 soldier is missing from the tank,” a handwritten report appears at 6:40 a.m. on June 25, 2006, more than an hour after the abduction.
Israeli forces later killed six Hezbollah terrorists in separate engagements as troops continued operations inside the Security Zone.
The Israeli airline said it would review its decision next week following an assessment of the situation.
The Israeli leader said the Jewish state turned the table on its enemies after Oct. 7, breaking through “the barrier of fear.”
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.
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.