Executive and Congressional Branches of Government Trade Allegations of Antisemitism

“Three months after Oct. 7 and the disgusting antisemitic demonstrations that followed, there is no excusing Secretary Cardona’s cowardly evasion of the antisemitic character of the phrase ‘from the river to the sea,’” Foxx stated. “Unfortunately, this is just the latest example in a long record of abject failure.”

The phrase that is a penchant among anti-Israel activists is antisemitic, per the American Jewish Committee “translate hate” glossary, which describes the phrase as calling “for the establishment of a state of Palestine from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea, erasing the State of Israel and its people.”

The Biden administration evidently sees that glossary as authoritative, as Ian Sams, a White House spokesman for oversight and investigations and special assistant to U.S. President Joe Biden, cited it on Tuesday, claiming that Rep. Mark Green (R-Tenn.) made an antisemitic comment.

Green referred on Tuesday to Alejandro Mayorkas, the U.S. secretary of homeland security whom he wants to be impeached, as a “reptile.”

A “House Republicans’ report said impeaching Mayorkas was about ‘deporting’ him. Now, the GOP chairman leading it makes another vile comment, calling Mayorkas, who is Jewish, a ‘reptile,’” wrote Sams, adding a screenshot of what he called the AJC’s “glossary of antisemitic terms.”

Under “creatures,” the AJC records, that creatures can be “a common form of coded antisemitism” that “includes illustrations and images that depict Jews as vermin, tentacled creatures, reptilian men, and other ‘subhuman’ monsters.” It notes Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan’s frequent references to Jews as “termites.”

Green, chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, had referred to Mayorkas as a “reptile with no [courage],” because the secretary hadn’t resigned, during a closed-door meeting with Republican colleagues, Politico reported, citing two GOP House members who were in the room.

“Anyone who has watched the secretary testify before any committee knows he is skilled at evading questions and accountability,” an aide of Green’s told JNS. “Chairman Green made these comments in a comparison with President [Richard] Nixon—referring to their sly abilities to evade accountability and the truth.”

“Insinuations that these comments mean anything more are just desperate attempts to distract from the secretary’s impeachable offenses,” the aide added.

Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.), who is Jewish, called Green “a friend, devout conservative and among very few who builds bipartisan relationships in Congress.”

“He is not antisemitic, and it’s shameful to insinuate it,” Phillips wrote.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), who is Jewish, disagreed.

“This type of vile language is unacceptable. Whether intended or not, we must stand in solidarity to oppose antisemitism and all forms of hate wherever they occur,” she wrote.

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Preceding provided by JNS.org