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News ID: 104684
Publish Date : 13 July 2022 - 21:20

U.S. Candidate for New York Congress Withstands Backlash for Supporting BDS

NEW YORK (Middle East Eye) – A candidate running in a crowded New York congressional race is facing backlash after she said she supported the Palestinian-led Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.
Yuh-Line Niou, a current New York state assemblywoman, is running for an open seat in the 10th Congressional District, which includes part of the heavily orthodox-Jewish neighborhood of Borough Park. She is currently one of the most outspoken progressives in the State Assembly and is a strong candidate for the Congressional race.
In an email exchange with Jewish Insider, she wrote: “I believe in the right to protest as a fundamental tenet of western democracy, so I do support BDS.”
In an interview last week with the news organization, she said: “People think that the BDS movement is in some way antisemitic, but I don’t think that it is. I think that it’s making sure that people can have the right to be able to have free speech.”
MEE reached out to Niou for comment but did not respond by the time of publication.
Though it has yet to be seen how her constituents will react to her comment, her opponents have already hit back. Bill de Blasio, a former mayor of NYC, told Jewish Insider: “The vast majority of us who are Democrats, the vast majority of us who are progressives, don’t agree with her.”
“We support Israel. We oppose BDS.”
Some lawmakers are calling her antisemitic for supporting the BDS movement. Kalman Yeger, a Jewish council member in Brooklyn who has said that Palestine does not exist, said: “Extremist antisemitic positioning from a candidate who wants to represent Borough Park in the U.S. Congress.”
The civil society-led BDS campaign was launched in 2005 by a group of Palestinian activists. It was founded against the backdrop of the collapse of Zionist-Palestinian negotiations and the the Second Intifada, which saw nearly 5,000 Palestinians martyred between 2000 and 2005.
Palestinian American Rashida Tlaib and Somali American Ilhan Omar, the first two Muslim women elected to Congress, became the first two U.S. lawmakers to publicly support the BDS movement when elected to the House of Representatives in 2018.