CA State Assembly Passes Important Anti-Semitism Resolution

California State Assembly Seal

California State Assembly Seal

Last week, the Higher Education Committee of the California State Assembly approved State Senator Jeff Stone’s resolution (SCR-35) condemning anti-Semitism at California college campuses, by a vote of 8-0. This resolution was previously passed by the CA State Senate. It will now go to the CA State General Assembly for a final vote.

The resolution focuses on recent anti-Semitic acts at UC schools, while recognizing that “anti-Semitism continues to be internationally prevalent.” In addition, the resolution criticizes anti-Jewish activity as retaliation “over political events in the Middle East or elsewhere.”

At the end, the resolution urges all publicly-funded schools in California to adopt a similar resolution condemning acts of “anti-Semitism and racism, including Islamophobia.”

This resolution utilizes the State Department’s Definition of Anti-Semitism, which includes the “3-D Test” of anti-Semitism relative to Israel: applying Double standards to, Delegitimizing, or Demonizing Israel, the only Jewish State.

In April, the Brandeis Center joined twenty other groups in writing a letter to State Senator Stone, urging him to support the State Dept. Definition of Anti-Semitism, stating, “…we are extremely troubled by the efforts of some groups to remove from the resolution any reference to the U.S. State Definition’s definition of anti-Semitism.”

LDB President Kenneth L. Marcus says, “I congratulate the Higher Ed. Committee on passing this vital piece of legislation with the State Department’s Definition, and hope similar legislation continues to spread to other states.”

Victories against BDS are reaching the university level in California, as well. In May, after LDB joined the AMCHA Initiative and other groups in urging UC President Janet Napolitano to adopt the State Department’s definition of anti-Semitism into university policy in order to restrict and inhibit acts of Anti-Semitism against students, Napolitano gave her public support for doing so. This issue will be on the agenda at the UC Board of Regents meeting in July.