Connect with us

INTERNACIONAL

Trump admin cracks down antisemitism as DOJ official exposes ‘violent rhetoric’ of radical protesters

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

The Trump administration has taken a more aggressive approach than its predecessor toward addressing the nationwide surge in antisemitic incidents, launching investigations, punishing elite universities, and intensifying its immigration enforcement practices.

Advertisement

President Donald Trump, through his Department of Justice (DOJ) and other agencies, is using law-and-order tactics that his deputies say are necessary, but that critics say could constitute overreach.

Harmeet Dhillon, the DOJ’s assistant attorney general for the Civil Rights Division, told Fox News Digital she has not seen any «close cases» when it comes to weighing antisemitic behavior against First Amendment rights of those who oppose Israel or Judaism.

BIDEN EDUCATION DEPT PUT PRIORITY ON PRONOUNS, LEFT BACKLOG OF NEARLY 200 ANTISEMITISM COMPLAINTS: OFFICIAL

Advertisement

«Criticizing the government of Israel is not what I’m typically seeing here,» Dhillon said. «I’m seeing an intifada revolution. I’m seeing blocking Jewish students from crossing campuses and destroying property on campus, which is a crime. … Quiet, polite conversation and disagreement with Israeli policy is not really what’s happening here. It’s literally people saying Israel shouldn’t exist — and bringing the revolution to the United States.» 

Dhillon added that «that type of violent rhetoric has led to violent acts in our country.»

Antisemitic violence

After Hamas’s deadly terrorist attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, the FBI’s hate crime statistics showed a sharp spike in anti-Jewish incidents in the U.S. The data runs through December 2023.

Advertisement

Anti-Defamation League (ADL) data from 2024 and high-profile incidents this year suggest the trend is continuing.

Police respond to a firebombing in Boulder, Colo., last week, where a suspect identified as Mohamed Sabry Soliman, right, was arrested and charged by state and federal authorities. (Storyful/KDVR)

An Egyptian national in the U.S. illegally in Boulder, Colorado, is facing state and federal charges for allegedly injuring 15 people, including elderly victims and a dog last weekend with Molotov cocktails during a peaceful pro-Israel demonstration in support of hostages being held by Hamas terrorists in Gaza.

Advertisement

Suspect Mohamed Sabry Soliman, 45, stated to authorities «he wanted to kill all Zionist people and wished they were all dead,» according to an FBI affidavit. During the attack he allegedly yelled «free Palestine,» the agent said.

In May, Yaron Lischinsky and Sarah Milgrim, who worked at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, D.C., were gunned down outside the Capitol Jewish Museum in D.C. 

Suspect Elias Rodriguez of Illinois shouted «free Palestine» as he was detained, and Interim U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro said her office is investigating the case as a hate crime and act of terrorism.

Advertisement
anti-israel-demostrators

Mohamed Sabry Soliman, left, and Elias Rodriguez allegedly committed crimes, including murder, and shouted, «Free Palestine» afterward. (Alex Osante / Instagram/@shinewithIsrael)

SUSPECT CHARGED WITH MURDERING ISRAELI EMBASSY STAFF COULD FACE DEATH PENALTY

In another incident, a man allegedly set fire to Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro’s residence on the first night of Passover. Emergency call logs released by local authorities revealed that the suspect, Cody Balmer, invoked Palestine after the arson and blamed Shapiro, who is Jewish, for «having my friends killed.» 

Tarek Bazrouk, who identified himself as a «Jew hater» and said Jewish people were «worthless,» allegedly carried out a series of assaults on Jewish New Yorkers in 2024 and 2025, according to an indictment brought against him in May. 

Advertisement

Bazrouk wore a green headband that mimicked Hamas garb and a keffiyeh during the attacks, and he celebrated Hamas and Hizballah on his social media, according to federal authorities.

Harvard and Columbia

Trump warned in an executive order at the start of his presidency that foreign nationals participating in «pro-jihadist protests» would be deported, and he specifically highlighted college campuses as being «infested with radicalism.»

Unlike the Biden administration, the Trump administration has since gone to war with elite universities, some of which have been roiled by disruptive pro-Palestinian protests that involve occupying academic buildings and installing encampments.

Advertisement
Harvard lawsuit

The Trump administration has taken on elite universities such as Harvard.

LEO TERRELL SAYS TRUMP ADMIN WILLING TO TAKE HARVARD ANTISEMITISM FIGHT ALL THE WAY TO SUPREME COURT

Harvard and Columbia, in particular, are now engaged in litigation after Trump moved to freeze billions of dollars in federal funding for the universities and ban Harvard’s foreign students.

The embattled schools have been successful in winning temporary pauses to Trump’s sanctions through the courts, but litigation is pending and legal experts have said they face an uphill battle.

Advertisement

Free speech controversies

The Trump administration has zeroed in on non-citizen students and activists who it has accused of supporting Palestinian causes in ways it deems hostile to U.S. interests.

Amid Trump’s pursuit of visa and green card holders, Mahmoud Khalil’s case has become a flashpoint.

Khalil was arrested in March and detained after the administration accused him of violating immigration laws by engaging in anti-Israel activism. 

Advertisement

This week, Khalil said in court papers the administration’s claims against him were «grotesque» and that his activism involved «protesting this Israeli government’s indiscriminate killing of thousands of innocent Palestinians.»

shipman-mahmoud-khalil-split

Acting Columbia University President Claire Shipman was interrupted by students during graduation, who chanted, «Free Mahmoud,» calling for Mahmoud Khalil, right, to be freed. (Columbia University / Selcuk Acar/Anadolu via Getty Images)

Civil rights groups have warned that the government’s hardliner posture risks violating free speech and protest rights. A coalition of 60 groups issued a joint statement this week on antisemitic hate crimes in which it warned the Trump administration not to over-correct because it would «make us all less safe.»

«As we condemn these heinous [antisemitic] acts and those who perpetrate hate and violence, we also recommit to ensuring that these events — and the legitimate fear in the Jewish community — are not exploited to justify inhumane immigration policies or to target Arab Americans and those who peacefully and nonviolently exercise their First Amendment rights in support of Palestinian human rights,» the groups said.

Advertisement

Dhillon told Fox News Digital: «It’s not my responsibility to balance free speech issues on campus. It’s my responsibility to enforce the federal civil rights laws. And my opinion, there’s really no conflict.»

Antisemitic task force and more

When he took office, Trump vowed in a string of executive orders to direct Attorney General Pam Bondi to «aggressively prosecute terroristic threats, arson, vandalism and violence against American Jews.» 

Trump appointees at the DOJ then moved quickly to convene an antisemitism task force. Dhillon said there is also frequent communication between the White House, the DOJ, and Jewish leaders about addressing antisemitism.

Advertisement

JEWISH STUDENTS WELCOME TRUMP ADMIN’S CRACKDOWN ON ANTISEMITISM, HAMAS SYMPATHIZERS ON CAMPUSES

DHILLON

DOJ Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Harmeet Dhillon says she’s focused on launching the division’s work toward combating antisemitism. (Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

«We have heard from the Jewish community, and I’ve probably met with — I think there’s at least two dozen rabbis who have my number on speed dial now. I literally sent three emails to rabbis in the last hour,» she said.

She said her division has opened several investigations involving land use for religious purposes under a law known as the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), including five related to Judaism. The administration is also notifying Jewish communities of grants available for added security at synagogues, and she said campuses are a «significant focus» for her.

Advertisement

Internal turmoil

After reports surfaced that Dhillon’s shakeup in the Civil Rights Division led to a mass exodus of more than 100 attorneys leaving the division, she told the media she was unfazed by the departures and that her focus remains on launching the division’s work toward combating antisemitism.

Testing the limits of his subordinates and the courts, another top DOJ official, Emil Bove, launched an internal investigation into Columbia student protesters early this year. The probe caused concern among line attorneys, who felt it was flimsy and was also met with multiple reprimands from a magistrate judge, according to the New York Times.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement in May that the New York Times’ story was false and fed to the newspaper «by a group of people who allowed antisemitism and support of Hamas terrorists to fester for years.»

Blanche confirmed the veracity of the investigation and said it involved, in part, a probe into a Hamas-linked image on Columbia University Apartheid Divest’s social media.

Advertisement
Advertisement

INTERNACIONAL

Why DOJ is caught up in two dozen court fights over voter rolls

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Arguing that noncitizens could be on state voter rolls — something that is illegal under federal law — the Trump administration is escalating its campaign to obtain registration data ahead of the 2026 midterms, despite a string of federal court setbacks.

Advertisement

The strategy has unfolded on three fronts: cooperation from Republican-led states willing to share voter data, lawsuits against roughly two dozen blue and purple states that have refused, and a legislative push in Congress to tighten national voting requirements. Federal judges have so far rebuffed the administration’s legal demands, but the Justice Department is widening its campaign as Election Day draws near. 

Hans von Spakovsky, a senior legal fellow at the conservative group Advancing American Freedom, said voter rolls are a central focus ahead of the midterms because of the Trump administration’s concerns that noncitizens are on them and could end up voting. It is illegal for noncitizens to vote in federal elections.

«The problem is, blue states, like Oregon, they have no interest in that kind of verification, so they’re not actually doing what they ought to be doing, which is running data-based comparisons with the [Department of Homeland Security],» von Spakovsky told Fox News Digital.

Advertisement

DEMOCRATS CELEBRATE AS 73,000 NORTH CAROLINA VOTERS WITHOUT PROPER ID STAY ON ROLLS

Attendees listen as Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas) speaks at an «Only Citizens Vote» bus tour rally advocating passage of the SAVE Act at Upper Senate Park outside the U.S. Capitol. Washington, District of Columbia, on Sept. 10, 2025. (Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

The DOJ has made sweeping demands for not just publicly available voter roll data, but also sensitive information, such as voters’ partial Social Security numbers and dates of birth.

Advertisement

The latest state to successfully fight the DOJ’s request is Michigan, where Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson said the federal government was not entitled to its 7 million voters’ personal information beyond what was already available.

The DOJ cited three federal laws, the Civil Rights Act, the Help America Vote Act and the National Voter Registration Act, that it said gave the Trump administration the right to the confidential information. Judge Hala Jarbou disagreed.

pam bondi

Attorney General Pam Bondi looks on during a news conference. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

«The Court concludes that (1) HAVA does not require the disclosure of any records, (2) the NVRA does not require the disclosure of voter registration lists because they are not records concerning the implementation of list maintenance procedures, and (3) the CRA does not require the disclosure of voter registration lists because they are not documents that come into the possession of election officials,» Jarbou, a Trump appointee wrote.

Advertisement

Federal judges in Oregon and California have also thrown out the DOJ’s lawsuits. The DOJ could appeal the decisions. A department spokesperson declined to comment for this story.

But the DOJ has seen cooperation from red states, such as Texas, Alabama and Mississippi, who were among several to reach a «Memorandum of Understanding» that led the states to hand over the information the department wanted.

In another maneuver, Attorney General Pam Bondi pressured Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, to provide the Midwest battleground’s voter rolls, saying in a warning letter that such action would help ease unrest in the state that stemmed from a federal immigration crackdown there. 

Advertisement

Democrats were enraged by the letter and have argued the Trump administration is infringing on states’ rights to conduct their own elections.

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Ct., argued the letter was a «pretext for Trump to take over elections in swing states,» while a state lawyer described the letter as a «ransom note.» The DOJ, at the time, told Fox News Digital Democrats were «shamelessly lying» about the letter’s purpose. Bondi said that handing over the voter rolls was among several «simple steps» Minnesota could take to «bring back law and order.» A lawsuit is still pending in Minnesota over the voter rolls.

In Congress, the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act would make it a national requirement that people registering to vote provide in-person proof of citizenship, such as birth certificates or passports. The legislation also includes a new national requirement for photo ID at the polls.

Advertisement

The bill has widespread Republican support. The House passed the SAVE Act last week, and even moderate Republican senators like Sen. Susan Collins, R-Me., have said they are on board with it. The bill is still stalled in the Senate, however, because it needs 60 votes to pass, meaning several Democrats would need to support it. Currently, none do. 

Von Spakovsky noted that the SAVE Act had a key provision that would allow private citizens to bring lawsuits over it.

SAVE Act

People participate in a protest against the Trump administration in front of the Capitol. Washington, District of Columbia, on Feb. 17, 2025. (Dominic Gwinn/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images)

«There’s no question in my mind that if the Save Act gets passed, there are election officials in blue states that will be reluctant to or may refuse to enforce the proof of citizenship requirement,» von Spakovsky said. «The Save Act provides a private right of action, so that means that citizens in Oregon could sue those election officials if they’re refusing to comply with the Save Act.»

Advertisement

He said the private right of action provision would also provide recourse for citizens if Democrats take over the DOJ in the next administration and refuse to enforce the SAVE Act.

Trump has repeatedly argued that noncitizen voting poses a threat to election integrity and has pressed Republican lawmakers to tighten federal requirements. Last week, he floated attempting to impose identification requirements through executive order if Congress does not act.

«This is an issue that must be fought, and must be fought, NOW!» Trump wrote on Truth Social. «If we can’t get it through Congress, there are Legal reasons why this SCAM is not permitted. I will be presenting them shortly, in the form of an Executive Order.»

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

A much broader bill called the Make Elections Great Again Act is still moving through the House and faces a steeper uphill climb to passage.

In addition to national documented proof of citizenship requirement, the MEGA Act would end universal mail voting, eliminate ranked-choice voting and ban ballots postmarked by Election Day from being accepted after that day, which would outlaw postmark rules in 14 states and Washington, D.C.

Advertisement

justice department,voting,elections,politics,law

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Netanyahu engaña a Trump y a los judíos estadounidenses…otra vez

Published

on


Dejemos de andarnos con rodeos:

el gobierno de extrema derecha de Israel, liderado por el primer ministro Benjamin Netanyahu, le está escupiendo en la cara a Estados Unidos y nos dice que está lloviendo.

Advertisement

Bibi está tomando por tontos al presidente Donald Trump y a los judíos estadounidenses.

Y si Estados Unidos lo deja salirse con la suya, somos unos tontos.

Mientras Trump mantiene la atención en la amenaza nuclear y de misiles iraní —que, aunque reducida, sigue siendo muy real y deberá abordarse diplomática o militarmente—, Bibi está amenazando fundamentalmente los intereses estadounidenses en Oriente Medio, por no mencionar la seguridad de los judíos de todo el mundo.

Advertisement

No puedo expresarlo de forma más concisa que Ehud Olmert, el ex primer ministro israelí.

“Se está llevando a cabo una campaña violenta y criminal para limpiar étnicamente los territorios de Cisjordania”, escribió en un ensayo publicado en Haaretz este mes.

“Pandillas de colonos armados persiguen, dañan, hieren e incluso matan a los palestinos que viven allí. Los ataques incluyen la quema de olivares, casas y coches; allanamientos de morada; y agresiones físicas a personas”.

Advertisement

Continuó: “Los alborotadores, los terroristas judíos, acosan a los palestinos con odio y violencia con un solo objetivo: obligarlos a huir de sus hogares. Todo esto se hace con la esperanza de que la tierra esté preparada para el asentamiento judío, en camino a hacer realidad el sueño de anexionarse todos los territorios”.

Los intentos cada vez más acelerados de Israel de anexarse ​​Cisjordania y permanecer permanentemente en la Franja de Gaza —y negar a los palestinos derechos políticos en ambas zonas— son tan moralmente imprudentes y demográficamente insanos como lo sería que Estados Unidos anexara a México.

Si fueran sólo los israelíes los que se vieran perjudicados por la loca fantasía de que unos 7 millones de judíos israelíes pueden controlar a unos 7 millones de árabes palestinos a perpetuidad, podría sentirme tentado a decir que, si los dirigentes de Israel quieren cometer un suicidio nacional, no puedo detenerlos.

Advertisement

Pero las consecuencias no se limitarán a Israel.

Creo que este esfuerzo mesiánico hará que el Israel actual sea para siempre indistinguible de la Sudáfrica del apartheid y tendrá graves consecuencias para los intereses estadounidenses y la seguridad de los judíos de todo el mundo.

Si el gobierno de Netanyahu persiste en este rumbo, desgarrará las instituciones judías en todas partes, ya que los miembros de la diáspora judía se verán obligados a decidir si apoyar o oponerse a un Israel similar al apartheid.

Advertisement

También acelerará la tendencia iniciada por la devastación israelí de Gaza, donde un número creciente de jóvenes demócratas y republicanos en Estados Unidos se están volviendo contra Israel y, en la periferia, contra los judíos en general.

Los padres judíos de todo el mundo pronto estarán en una posición que nunca soñaron:

ver a sus hijos y nietos aprender lo que es ser judío en un mundo donde el Estado judío es un Estado paria.

Advertisement

Una encuesta del Instituto para el Proyecto de Políticas de Entendimiento de Oriente Medio, realizada por YouGov en noviembre, reveló que el 51% de los votantes republicanos menores de 45 años preferían apoyar a un candidato en las primarias presidenciales de 2028 que estuviera a favor de reducir las transferencias de armas financiadas con fondos públicos a Israel.

Solo el 27% favoreció a un candidato que aumentara o mantuviera el suministro de armas.

Los candidatos demócratas que no describen la guerra de Israel en Gaza como un genocidio se enfrentan a serios obstáculos con los jóvenes votantes progresistas.

Advertisement

En la Conferencia de Seguridad de Múnich la semana pasada, se le preguntó a la representante Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez si creía que «el candidato presidencial demócrata en las elecciones de 2028 debería reevaluar la ayuda militar a Israel».

«Creo que, personalmente, la idea de una ayuda completamente incondicional, haga lo que haga, no tiene sentido. Creo que facilitó un genocidio en Gaza».

Como dije al principio, Netanyahu ha engañado a Trump, así como al lobby proisraelí liderado por el Comité de Asuntos Públicos Estados Unidos-Israel y muchos otros supuestos líderes judíos estadounidenses.

Advertisement

Ha logrado que se centren en Irán e ignoren que todo lo que hace en Gaza, Cisjordania y dentro de Israel tensará las relaciones entre Estados Unidos y sus principales aliados en Oriente Medio, como Egipto, Jordania, Arabia Saudí, Emiratos Árabes Unidos, Turquía y Qatar.

Amenaza

Sí, Irán sigue representando una amenaza nuclear reducida, pero muy real, tras los ataques aéreos israelíes y estadounidenses contra sus instalaciones de enriquecimiento nuclear y misiles balísticos en junio.

Advertisement

Ya ha reconstruido en gran medida su arsenal de misiles balísticos, que podrían causar graves daños físicos a Israel si se reanuda la guerra.

Pero centrarse exclusivamente en la amenaza externa de Irán ignora la amenaza interna que el gobierno de Netanyahu representa para Israel y su posición como democracia de derecho y sociedad unificada.

Netanyahu lleva tres años empeñado, incluso durante la guerra de Gaza, en llevar a cabo un golpe judicial que prácticamente eliminaría la separación de poderes en Israel, lo que permitiría a su Tribunal Supremo controlar los excesos del partido gobernante.

Advertisement

¿Es Irán responsable de ello? No.

¿Ha participado Irán en un esfuerzo incansable para purgar o despojar de su poder al valiente e independiente fiscal general de Israel, Gali Baharav-Miara?

Ese fiscal general, respaldado por la Corte Suprema, es lo único que impide nuevos ataques a un gobierno basado en normas:

Advertisement

la desestimación del juicio por corrupción de Netanyahu, pero también los esfuerzos de Bibi por politizar los nombramientos de funcionarios y una exención generalizada del servicio militar para los judíos ultraortodoxos que lo mantienen en el poder.

¿Ha bloqueado Irán la creación de una comisión de investigación independiente sobre el increíble fracaso de inteligencia y liderazgo antes de la mortífera invasión de Hamás del 7 de octubre de 2023?

Esa invasión no solo ocurrió bajo el mandato de Netanyahu, sino que fue claramente causada, en parte, por sus esfuerzos por demostrar al mundo que Israel podía lograr la paz con los estados árabes sin hacer la paz con los palestinos.

Advertisement

Hamás se fortaleció gracias a los prolongados esfuerzos de Netanyahu por apoyarlo con dinero catarí, de modo que el liderazgo palestino siempre estuviera dividido entre Hamás en Gaza y la Autoridad Palestina en Cisjordania.

De esa manera, Bibi pudo decirles a todos los presidentes estadounidenses que lamentaba profundamente no tener un socio palestino unificado para la paz con el que negociar.

¿Acaso Irán nombró a compinches de Bibi con antecedentes inexpertos para dirigir las organizaciones de seguridad más importantes de Israel: el Shin Bet y el Mosad?

Advertisement

¿Qué impulsó a Trump a exigir públicamente que el presidente de Israel, Isaac Herzog, indultara a Netanyahu, incluso antes del veredicto, por los cargos de corrupción que se le imputan?

Sería un golpe terrible para el Estado de derecho en Israel.

Ciertamente, no fue Irán.

Advertisement

Y esto es lo verdaderamente descabellado.

Israel nunca ha sido tan temido militarmente ni tan admirado tecnológicamente por sus vecinos árabes, debido a los golpes que asestó a Irán, Hezbolá y Hamás.

Si Netanyahu entablara negociaciones para una solución de dos Estados con la Autoridad Palestina —en condiciones razonables—, allanaría el camino para la paz entre Israel y Arabia Saudita, Líbano, Siria e Irak.

Advertisement

Todo el vecindario, y todo el mundo musulmán más allá, se abriría a Israel; Irán quedaría totalmente aislado.

La tecnología israelí y la energía árabe crearían una sinergia asombrosa para la era de la inteligencia artificial.

Eso sería un gran beneficio para los intereses estadounidenses.

Advertisement

Si bien seguramente persistirían algunas complicaciones, Oriente Medio estaría esencialmente haciendo la paz bajo el amparo estadounidense.

Y la reducción de las tensiones entre Israel y el mundo árabe permitiría a la administración Trump hacer lo que las anteriores administraciones estadounidenses han anhelado:

reducir su presencia militar en la región y centrarse en contrarrestar a China en Asia. Desafortunadamente, Bibi tiene otras prioridades.

Advertisement

Las ambiciones anexionistas del gabinete de Netanyahu chocan directamente con el plan de 20 puntos de Trump, que imagina una solución de dos Estados algún día.

La Junta de la Paz, creada por Trump para supervisar dicho plan, celebrará su reunión inaugural en Washington el jueves, pero Netanyahu no asistirá.

El ministro de Finanzas de Bibi, Bezalel Smotrich, dijo el martes que después de las elecciones de este otoño, en su próximo mandato “fomentará la migración” de palestinos de Cisjordania y la Franja de Gaza.

Advertisement

Mientras tanto, el martes, todos los aliados árabes clave de Estados Unidos y Turquía, que son centrales en el acuerdo de cese del fuego de Trump en Gaza, se unieron en una declaración condenando enérgicamente la decisión de Israel de designar tierras en la Cisjordania ocupada como tierra estatal israelí.

Cuando Israel se involucra en una anexión de facto, con lo que grupos de derechos humanos describen como limpieza étnica en Gaza y Cisjordania, se convierte en un importante contribuyente al conflicto permanente en la región.

Nada de esto beneficia a Estados Unidos, pero Irán lo agradece enormemente.

Advertisement

Los gobernantes islamofascistas de Irán representan una amenaza muy real para Israel.

Lideran un régimen terrible cuya caída sería una bendición para su pueblo y la región.

Pero, por favor, por favor , ahórreme la tontería de que Irán es la única amenaza para Israel hoy en día.

Advertisement

Culpables

Irán no es la mayor amenaza para Israel como democracia gobernada por el Estado de derecho.

No es la mayor amenaza para las relaciones entre Estados Unidos e Israel.

Advertisement

No es la mayor amenaza para la unidad y la seguridad de los judíos en todo el mundo.

No es la razón por la que tantos talentosos tecnólogos, ingenieros y médicos israelíes se están marchando.

Y no es la principal razón por la que Israel se está convirtiendo en un estado de apartheid, no solo por negarse a seguir intentando crear un Estado palestino separado, sino también por esforzarse por hacerlo imposible.

Advertisement

Ese título le corresponde al gobierno de fanáticos mesiánicos, nacionalistas que odian a los árabes e israelíes ultraortodoxos antimodernos creado por Netanyahu para mantenerse en el poder.

c.2026 The New York Times Company

Advertisement
Continue Reading

INTERNACIONAL

Sanders-endorsed Senate candidate knocked for alleged flip-flop to ‘have it both ways’ on key issue

Published

on


NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A Democratic Senate candidate endorsed by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., is being slammed for allegedly flip-flopping on one of his primary campaign issues.

Advertisement

Abdul El-Sayed, the progressive candidate who previously ran an unsuccessful bid for Michigan governor, has made Medicare for All a hallmark of his Senate campaign.

However, as the Michigan Senate primary race heats up, El-Sayed’s Democratic opponent, state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, is accusing him of backing down from a full Medicare for all stance and of «rewriting definitions to have it both ways.»

MEET THE NEW ‘SQUAD’: THE NEXT GENERATION OF TRUMP-ERA PROGRESSIVE CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATES

Advertisement

Left: Michigan Democratic Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed. Right: Michigan Democratic candidate and state Sen. Mallory McMorrow. (Photos by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images; MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)

Roxie Richner, an El-Sayed campaign spokesperson, responded by telling Fox News Digital that «Dr. El-Sayed is and has always been for Medicare for All—guaranteed public health insurance for every American. Cradle to grave. No premiums, deductibles, or co-pays.» 

«Dr. El-Sayed would be the first Democratic doctor elected to the U.S. Senate since 1969, and he looks forward to passing Medicare for All into law,» added Richner.

Advertisement

El-Sayed’s campaign website page on «A Healthier America» cites a book he co-authored in 2021 in which he wrote that limiting private alternatives to Medicare for All would be important to ensuring providers accepted the insurance. The book advocates for Medicare for All as a type of «monopsony» in healthcare, in which there is only a single buyer of medical services, the government. 

«By insuring all Americans, M4A becomes a monopsony in healthcare. This is different from a monopoly, where there’s only one seller of a good; in a monopsony there’s only one buyer of a good. That gives the single buyer considerable negotiating leverage, which Medicare could use to rein in the cost of drugs, hospital stays, and physician services,» the book reads. 

In a November post on X, El-Sayed explained that this monopsony «would instantaneously create a disciplining feature against rising prices,» because it «takes out the profit motive on the payer end of the transaction.» 

Advertisement

The book further states that «because alternatives to M4A [Medicare for All] would be limited, participation of providers would be virtually guaranteed.» 

«Instead of spending time and money dealing with the arcane requirements of hundreds of different health plans […] providers could use one streamlined system that would free up resources to focus on clinical care,» the books reads. 

The latest version of the federal Medicare for All Act, introduced in the Senate by Sanders, includes language that would effectively ban most comprehensive private insurance plans and relegate private insurers to providing limited supplemental care. 

Advertisement

The legislation would make it unlawful for «a private health insurer to sell health insurance coverage that duplicates the benefits provided under this Act; or (2) an employer to provide benefits for an employee, former employee, or the dependents of an employee or former employee that duplicate the benefits provided under this Act.»

MICHIGAN FAMILY SAYS COUNTY SEIZED HOME OVER TAX BILL THEY DIDN’T OWE — CASE NOW HEADS TO THE SUPREME COURT

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed participates in 2020 pandemic roundtable in Michigan

Dr. Abdul El-Sayed speaks during a coronavirus public health roundtable with Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. (Erin Kirkland/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

El-Sayed testified before the Senate in support of the Medicare for All Act in 2022, calling it «the clearest pathway to universal, durable health care insurance, bar none» and saying that «cradle to grave coverage would do away with the premiums, co pays, deductibles that leave even privately insured Americans rationing their health care today.» 

Advertisement

The year before, in an interview with NerdWallet, El-Sayed said that under a Medicare for All plan, the government would be «buying you out» of your private insurance plan but that «a few insurance companies that offered a sort of concierge-level service for folks who wanted to pay for that.»

In a 2024 episode of the «America Dissected» podcast, El-Sayed emphasized that «we don’t really need private health insurance in this country.»

He said that «private health insurance is a system by which you have a middleman in our healthcare system making a tremendous amount of money that is leading to a number of the biggest problems in American healthcare whether that’s the fact that our costs continue to spiral upward, whether that’s the fact that nearly ten million people in our country don’t get health insurance at all, or it’s the fact that we are consistently in this country, unable to guarantee, even people who are insurance access to the health care they need.»

Advertisement

In October, El-Sayed knocked McMorrow for advocating for allowing a public option under universal healthcare, writing on X, «a public option can’t deliver healthcare to every Michigander. Medicare for All can.» Politico, in December, reported El-Sayed slamming McMorrow’s call for universal health care with a public option as «incoherent.»

«Now a public option is exactly that; it’s just an option. There is no reason why it would actually address any of the foundational problems in our system. It wouldn’t bring down the rising costs. It wouldn’t guarantee people health care, and we don’t really know how much it would cost,» he said. 

Yet, while speaking on the Brian Tyler Cohen Podcast in January, El-Sayed suggested that under Medicare for All, «if you like your insurance from your employer or from your union, that can still be there for you.»

Advertisement

PROGRESSIVES NOTCH ANOTHER WIN OVER DEMOCRATIC MODERATES AS SANDERS-AOC ALLY NEARS CONGRESS

Sen. Bernie Sanders seen speaking at a rally

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., introduced the Medicare for All Act. (Getty Images)

Days later, speaking on radio channel WDET, he again said, «Medicare for All is government health insurance guaranteed for everyone, regardless of what circumstances you’re in. If you like your insurance through your employer or through your union, I hope that’ll be there for you. But if you lose your job, if your factory shuts down, you shouldn’t be destitute without the health care that you need and deserve.» He also said, «If you have a public option, what happens is, the private health insurance system will try to dump all of the most expensive patients onto that public option, vastly increasing the cost of that public option and making it unsustainable.» 

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP

Advertisement

El-Sayed’s campaign website states that he «believes in expanding Medicare to cover every single American from cradle to grave while sustaining the option for workers to keep supplemental private insurance their unions or employers may provide.» Amid criticism from McMorrow, El-Sayed doubled down on his Medicare for All messaging in a January fundraising message, in which he wrote that «private insurance could supplement or duplicate Medicare.»

Meanwhile, McMorrow has accused him of not being honest on Medicare for All. 

«On an issue as important as healthcare, you have to be honest about what you’re fighting for,» McMorrow wrote in a public reply to El-Sayed, adding, «The Medicare for All legislation that you’ve championed completely eliminates private health insurance as it exists today.»

Advertisement

Sanders’ office did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment. 

midterm elections,senate elections,democratic party,michigan

Continue Reading

Tendencias