logo
Jewish group urges Trump to investigate DEI programs for promoting antisemitism

Jewish group urges Trump to investigate DEI programs for promoting antisemitism

New York Post30-04-2025
A Jewish legal advocacy group is urging the Trump administration to launch a sweeping investigation and to halt federal funding to K-12 schools that are using DEI — diversity, equity and inclusion programs — to promote antisemitism.
The Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law sent a bombshell 15-page letter to US Education Secretary Linda McMahon citing evidence of Jews being labeled as 'inherently racist [and] oppressive' and claiming that Jewish students are being discriminated against to achieve DEI for other minority groups.
The group said DEI programs fomenting Jew hatred both violate the 1964 civil rights law and President Trump's Jan. 20 executive order to ban such initiatives, which the commander in chief himself described as 'illegal and immoral.'
3 The Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law is calling on the Trump administration to launch an investigation into K-12 schools using DEI to promote antisemitism.
Photo by'If President Trump is serious about ending radical indoctrination in K-12 schooling, he should start with some of the antisemitic educators whom we have found,' said Kenneth Marcus, chairman & CEO of the Brandeis Center and former US assistant secretary of education.
'Ironically, some of the worst antisemitism is coming from 'progressive educators' who purveying anti-Jewish hatred in the name of 'liberated ethnic studies' and social justice education,' Marcus told The Post.
The April 28 letter to McMahon cites blatant examples of school officials and teachers bashing Israel and Jews, particularly in California, including:
A California district Office of Equity circulated a message to teachers and staff stating, 'Hands off Sacred Land from Shellmo[u]nd to Jerusalem' and 'Zionism is Racism.'
A Berkeley second-grade teacher told her 7-year-old students to write messages on sticky notes condemning US support for Israel, stating, 'Stop bombing babies.' The notes were then posted outside the classroom of the only Jewish teacher in the school, the complaint said.
The Los Angeles Unified School District approved materials for a 'Free Palestine' event and the teacher responsible for the event provided material to students that referred to Israel as 'Occupied Palestine' and used antisemitic tropes to demonize Israelis and Jews.
The civil rights group also said teachers' unions in California and Massachusetts promote DEI-
based, antisemitic teachings.
And an unapproved course of study called 'Teach Palestine' is spreading across the US 'thanks to the teachers' union,' the Brandeis Center lawyers said.
3 The group sent Secretary of Education Linda McMahon evidence that schools are discriminating against Jews.
Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images
The complaint claimed school districts are contracting with outside groups like the Arab Resource and Organizing Center (AROC) and allowing them to 'indoctrinate' students with their own DEI-based, antisemitic agendas.
'We have evidence that California school districts in San Francisco, Oakland, and Berkeley have allowed AROC to come onto school grounds and gain access to schoolchildren, whom they engage outside of class, and ply with propaganda and hateful messages about Jews and Israel,' the letter said.
Brandeis Center lawyers told McMahon, 'Anti-Semitic indoctrination is an increasingly pervasive and dangerous part of DEI programming that is being taught in K-12 schools across America. The anti-Semitic propaganda brought into schools by teachers, unions, and third-party contractors …. indoctrinate students with messages of anti-Jewish and anti-American hate and fosters a hostile environment for Jewish students in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
'Any plan for eliminating federal funding pursuant under Trump's executive order should include provisions target educators who condone or enable anti-Semitic curricula, instruction, programs, or activities disguised as 'DEI,' the group said.
3 The group is asking the Trump administration to halt federal funding to schools found to have been promoting antisemitism.
AFP via Getty Images
The group asked McMahon to:
Investigate and when substantiated, halt federal funding for school districts that refuse to address or 'intentionally perpetrate' acts that are 'harming Jewish and other children in their care.'
Review anti-Semitic DEI materials promoted by teachers and their unions, third party contractors and so-called 'liberated' ethnic studies curricula that are being installed in high schools.
'We at the Brandeis Center have seen DEI used as a tool by teachers, teachers' unions, and third-party contractors to foment Jew-hatred in K-12 schools,' Rachel Lerman and Denise Katz-Prober of the Brandeis Center said in the letter.
'Jewish parents and children have suffered—and are suffering—directly from DEI-based lessons that teach students, inter alia, to regard Jews as evil `oppressors' who should be marginalized, outcast, and justifiably subject to discrimination, harassment or worse.'
The DEI narrative categorizes Jews and Jewish children as 'oppressors' who are 'white' and 'privileged' — regardless of skin color or family history, the center said.
Many DEI-proponents also praise and justify the October 7, 2023 Hamas terrorist attacks against Israel as legitimate 'resistance' and 'falsely teaching children that the State of Israel is a 'settler colonial' and 'apartheid'' regime that has no right to exist.
The US Education Department had no immediate comment.
McMahon's agency did not open a civil rights probe into the Chicago Public School System for launching a remedial program that only aided black students and not other students who are struggling academically.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.
A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.

Yahoo

time2 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A 90-day pause on imposing higher tariffs on China is due to expire on Tuesday and it is unclear if it will be extended. After the most recent round of China-U.S. trade talks, held late last month in Stockholm, Chinese and U.S. officials said they expected the deadline to be extended for another 90 days. The U.S. side said the decision was up to President Donald Trump. So far there has been no formal announcement about whether he will endorse an extension or push ahead with the higher tariffs. The uncertainty has left businesses in limbo and a decision to raise the import duties could jolt world markets. SILENCE FROM WASHINGTON AND BEIJING Trump has repeatedly shifted deadlines and tariff rates, and neither side has indicated what it plans for Tuesday. Extending the Aug. 12 deadline for reaching a trade agreement with China would forestall earlier threats of tariffs of up to 245%. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Trump was deciding about another 90-day delay to allow time to work out details of an agreement setting tariffs on most products at 50%, including extra import duties related to illicit trade in the powerful opiate fentanyl. Higher tariffs are aimed at offsetting the huge, chronic U.S. trade deficit with China, which hit a 21-year low in July as the threat of tariffs bit into Chinese exports. It's not unusual for the U.S. to give hints on where talks stand, but it's rare for China to make announcements until major decisions are set. CHINA RESISTED CUTTING AN EARLY BARGAIN Prohibitively high tariffs on Chinese exports to the United States would put huge pressure on Beijing at a time when the Chinese economy, the world's second largest, is still recovering from a prolonged downturn in its property market. Lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have left around 200 million of its workers reliant on 'gig work,' crimping the job market. Higher import taxes on small parcels from China have also hurt smaller factories and layoffs have accelerated, But the U.S. relies heavily on imports from China for all sorts of products, from household goods and clothing to wind turbines, basic computer chips, electric vehicle batteries and the rare earths needed to make them. That gives Beijing some powerful leverage in the negotiations with Washington. Even with higher tariffs, China remains competitive for many products. And its leaders are aware that the U.S. economy is only just beginning to feel the effects of higher prices from Trump's broad tariff hikes. For now, imports from China are subject to a 10% baseline tariff and a 20% extra tariff related to the fentanyl issue. Some products are taxed at higher rates. U.S. exports to China are subject to tariffs of around 30%. Before the two sides called a truce, Trump had threatened to impose 245% import duties on Chinese goods. China retaliated by saying it would hike its tariff on U.S. products to 125%. MUCH IS AT STAKE A trade war between the world's two largest economies has ramifications across the global economy, affecting industrial supply chains, demand for commodities like copper and oil and geopolitical issues such as the war in Ukraine. After a phone call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in June, Trump said he hoped to meet with Xi later this year. That's an incentive for striking a deal with Beijing. If the two sides fail to keep their truce, trade tensions could escalate and tariffs might rise to even higher levels, inflicting still more pain on both economies and rattling world markets. Businesses would refrain from making investment commitments and hiring, while inflation would surge higher. Companies are in an 'extended wait-and-see mode,' Oxford Economics said in a recent report. Christopher Bodeen, The Associated Press Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.
A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.

San Francisco Chronicle​

time4 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

A pause on higher tariffs for China is due to expire Tuesday. Here's what to know.

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — A 90-day pause on imposing higher tariffs on China is due to expire on Tuesday and it is unclear if it will be extended. After the most recent round of China-U.S. trade talks, held late last month in Stockholm, Chinese and U.S. officials said they expected the deadline to be extended for another 90 days. The U.S. side said the decision was up to President Donald Trump. So far there has been no formal announcement about whether he will endorse an extension or push ahead with the higher tariffs. The uncertainty has left businesses in limbo and a decision to raise the import duties could jolt world markets. SILENCE FROM WASHINGTON AND BEIJING Trump has repeatedly shifted deadlines and tariff rates, and neither side has indicated what it plans for Tuesday. Extending the Aug. 12 deadline for reaching a trade agreement with China would forestall earlier threats of tariffs of up to 245%. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said Trump was deciding about another 90-day delay to allow time to work out details of an agreement setting tariffs on most products at 50%, including extra import duties related to illicit trade in the powerful opiate fentanyl. Higher tariffs are aimed at offsetting the huge, chronic U.S. trade deficit with China, which hit a 21-year low in July as the threat of tariffs bit into Chinese exports. It's not unusual for the U.S. to give hints on where talks stand, but it's rare for China to make announcements until major decisions are set. CHINA RESISTED CUTTING AN EARLY BARGAIN Prohibitively high tariffs on Chinese exports to the United States would put huge pressure on Beijing at a time when the Chinese economy, the world's second largest, is still recovering from a prolonged downturn in its property market. Lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have left around 200 million of its workers reliant on 'gig work,' crimping the job market. Higher import taxes on small parcels from China have also hurt smaller factories and layoffs have accelerated, But the U.S. relies heavily on imports from China for all sorts of products, from household goods and clothing to wind turbines, basic computer chips, electric vehicle batteries and the rare earths needed to make them. That gives Beijing some powerful leverage in the negotiations with Washington. Even with higher tariffs, China remains competitive for many products. And its leaders are aware that the U.S. economy is only just beginning to feel the effects of higher prices from Trump's broad tariff hikes. For now, imports from China are subject to a 10% baseline tariff and a 20% extra tariff related to the fentanyl issue. Some products are taxed at higher rates. U.S. exports to China are subject to tariffs of around 30%. Before the two sides called a truce, Trump had threatened to impose 245% import duties on Chinese goods. China retaliated by saying it would hike its tariff on U.S. products to 125%. MUCH IS AT STAKE A trade war between the world's two largest economies has ramifications across the global economy, affecting industrial supply chains, demand for commodities like copper and oil and geopolitical issues such as the war in Ukraine. After a phone call with Chinese leader Xi Jinping in June, Trump said he hoped to meet with Xi later this year. That's an incentive for striking a deal with Beijing. If the two sides fail to keep their truce, trade tensions could escalate and tariffs might rise to even higher levels, inflicting still more pain on both economies and rattling world markets. Businesses would refrain from making investment commitments and hiring, while inflation would surge higher.

A federal takeover of DC?
A federal takeover of DC?

USA Today

time4 minutes ago

  • USA Today

A federal takeover of DC?

Welcome to your week!🙋🏼‍♀️ I'm Nicole Fallert. Feeling itchy? Hundreds of federal officers deployed to DC streets as homeless pushed out President Donald Trump appears poised on Monday to take federal actions to address crime in Washington. He teased a White House news conference about "Crime and 'Beautification,'" an initiative that will also target homeless individuals in the city. Ahead of the announcement, The White House said 450 officers from multiple federal agencies were deployed in high-traffic D.C. areas and other hotspots over the weekend. The moves come despite the fact violent crime declined by 35% in D.C. in 2024, according to data compiled by the D.C. Metropolitan Police. Zelenskyy rejects conceding land to Russia after Trump suggests 'swapping' territories President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are scheduled to meet this week in Alaska to discuss an end to the three-year Russian war on Ukraine in the first in-person session between the two world leaders since Trump returned to the White House in January More news to know now Buying a new car? Check out USA TODAY's new Cars hub, with reviews, news and more. Authorities have not released a potential motive for CDC shooting Officer David Rose, 33, was the sole casualty after a shooter opened fire on Centers for Disease Control buildings near Emory University in Atlanta on Friday. The suspected gunman was found dead on the second story of a building housing a CVS and died at the scene from a gunshot wound. It was unclear if it came from officers or was self-inflicted. Rose joined the DeKalb Police Department in September 2024 and served in the North-Central Precinct, officials have said. He was a father of two with a third child on the way, county officials said. How Texas Democrats are living on the run ~ Texas state legislator John Bucy to USA TODAY about his self-imposed exodus from his family. Bucy is among the more than 50 Democratic lawmakers who've fled the Lone Star State to thwart President Donald Trump's effort to protect his razor-thin Republican majority in Congress. He packed his suitcase to be gone for 30 days – maybe longer. Today's talkers A Pennsylvania softball team versus the world Pennsylvania made its first Little League Softball World Series championship game appearance since 2018, and the West Suburban LL squad did not disappoint. Johnstown, representing the Mid-Atlantic region, recorded four consecutive shutout wins to end the tournament and capture the 2025 LLSWS championship 1-0 over Floyds Knobs, Indiana, which was representing the Central region. The victory marks the first Little League Softball World Series title for a team from Pennsylvania since 1978. Photo of the day: Meet Hezly Rivera Hezly Rivera served notice that she's going to be a gymnast to watch in the leadup to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games. The 17-year-old won her first title at the U.S. gymnastics championships on Sunday night, establishing herself as a favorite for the all-around at the world championships this fall. Nicole Fallert is a newsletter writer at USA TODAY, sign up for the email here. Want to send Nicole a note? Shoot her an email at NFallert@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store