Israel Condemns New NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani as ‘Antisemitic’ New York’s new mayor walked into City Hall and lit a match. Within hours, Israel’s government was accusing him of antisemitism, Jewish leaders were sounding alarms, and Republicans were calling his first act a gift to extremists. He says it’s about corruption, clean government, and free speech. They say it’s about abandoning Jew…CONTINUE READING BELOW
Zohran Mamdani’s first hours in office became a global flashpoint because they collided with fears already running hot.
By canceling Eric Adams’ post-indictment executive orders, he also scrapped New York City’s formal embrace
of the IHRA antisemitism definition and its quiet boycott of the BDS movement.
To Israel’s Foreign Ministry and mainstream Jewish groups, that looked less like bureaucratic housekeeping and more
like a symbolic green light to Israel’s fiercest critics at a dangerous moment.
Mamdani insists the opposite: that true protection for Jewish New Yorkers cannot rest on a definition many civil
liberties advocates and left-leaning Jewish organizations see as blurring antisemitism with criticism of Israel.
He is betting his new administration on a different model—funding hate-crime prevention, championing universal
protections, and separating ethics reform from foreign policy litmus tests.
His challenge now is brutal: prove, under intense scrutiny, that Jews can feel safer in a city whose mayor
just rejected the consensus language meant to defend the…
?>