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Zeldin introduces bill to protect US companies from international BDS efforts

“There is no denying that anti-Semitism is a persistent problem in our society that needs to be identified, called out and crushed in all forms,” said co-chair of the House Republican Israel Caucus Rep. Lee Zeldin.

U.S. Congress. Credit: Pixabay.
U.S. Congress. Credit: Pixabay.

A group of Republicans in Congress, led by the co-chair of the House Republican Israel Caucus Rep. Lee Zeldin (R-N.Y.), introduced a bill on March 3 to protect American companies from being coerced to provide information to international organizations for the purpose of furthering boycotts against Israel.

The Anti-Boycott Act, which has 46 Republican co-sponsors, would amend the Export Administration Act of 1979 to prohibit boycotts or boycott requests imposed by international governmental organizations against Israel. The act would also hold accountable individuals who attempt to violate the act. It also affirms Congress’s opposition to the BDS movement and considers the U.N. Human Rights Council’s creation of a database of companies doing business in the West Bank, eastern Jerusalem and the Golan Heights to be an act of BDS.

“In the past year alone, we have witnessed an alarming rise in anti-Semitic and anti-Israel hate and violence in the United States and around the world. Whether it’s Hamas’s terror attacks on Israel, well-known companies embracing the BDS movement, anti-Semitism in academia, discrimination against Israel at the U.N. or congregants of a Texas synagogue being held hostage, there is no denying that anti-Semitism is a persistent problem in our society that needs to be identified, called out and crushed in all forms,” Zeldin said in a news release.

“Too many—even in the halls of Congress—have emboldened anti-Semitic and anti-Israel rhetoric by accepting the BDS movement whose founder, in referring to Zionism, said ‘I, for one, support euthanasia,’ ” he continued. “This legislation not only reinforces congressional opposition to the BDS movement but protects American companies from being forced to provide information to international organizations that peddle this hate-filled movement and holds those who attempt to violate that protection accountable.”

The bill is supported by the Republican Jewish Coalition and the Zionist Organization of America.

“It’s been nearly three years since the House passed the resolution Congressman Zeldin co-authored condemning the BDS movement in 2019. The current Congress has a chance to act upon that overwhelming anti-BDS sentiment by passing Congressman Zeldin’s Israel Anti-Boycott Act,” said RJC national chairman Norm Coleman in a news release. “Our long-standing anti-boycott laws should apply to international organizations like the U.N. Human Rights Council and the E.U. just as much as they do to the countries in the Arab League.”

ZOA president Mort Klein said that while the Abraham Accords were a big setback for the “Arab-Islamic” war against Israel, organized boycotts of Israel continue and threaten the Jewish state’s well-being.

“Today’s version of this evil, anti-Semitic action is as likely to be organized by the United Nations itself or the European Union as by an Arab state that is a terrorist, human-rights-abusing dictatorship,” he said.

“This new Zeldin-initiated law will update the Export Control Reform Act to make it explicit that U.S. law still prohibits compliance with an anti-Israel boycott, even when it is not organized by an unfriendly, radical government,” Klein said in the release. “It also makes it clear that boycotts of Judea and Samaria are boycotts of Israel and Jews, and are punishable by American law. The disgraceful anti-Semitic practice of the U.N. to facilitate the anti-Semitic BDS movement by compiling lists of companies doing business in Israel is also explicitly covered by this new law.”

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The co-author of the K-12 law told JNS that “this attempt to undermine crucial safety protections for Jewish children at a time when antisemitic hate and violence is rampant and rising is breathtaking.”
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