Republicans’ Revealing Arguments Against the Islamophobia Envoy
The antisemitism envoy is exactly what
congressional Republicans fear the Islamophobia envoy could become: a threat to
free speech.
December 29,
2021
https://jewishcurrents.org/republicans-revealing-arguments-against-the-islamophobia-envoy
EARLIER THIS MONTH, the
House of Representatives considered a bill to
create a State Department envoy to monitor Islamophobia overseas, a position
modeled on the one that already exists to monitor global antisemitism. Every
single House Republican voted no.
In explaining why the State Department does not need an envoy to combat
Islamophobia, however, they repeatedly employed anti-Muslim stereotypes that
demonstrate just how prevalent Islamophobia remains in Washington. Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene warned that
the legislation might shield Muslims who rape non-Muslim women. Rep. Ken Buck
claimed the bill might render it Islamophobic to accuse Rep. Ilhan Omar, one of
the bill’s co-sponsors, of marrying her brother. Rep. Scott Perry labeled
America’s largest Muslim advocacy group, the Council on American–Islamic
Relations, a terrorist organization, and warned that the legislation might
entitle it to federal funds.
These accusations shared a common mantra: that because
Omar’s legislation doesn’t define Islamophobia, it could be interpreted in ways
that violate constitutional rights. “Without clear definitions,” warned Rep.
Guy Reschenthaler, “even First Amendment-protected speech could qualify for an
investigation.” Rep. Michael McCaul claimed that the bill’s discussion of
Islamophobia “is so vague and subjective that it could be used against
legitimate speech.” Rep. Perry declared that “the goal is to silence dissent.”
It is true that the legislation—which appears unlikely
to pass the Republican-controlled Senate—doesn’t define Islamophobia. What it
does instead lists the
behaviors that the envoy would monitor: ‘‘acts of physical violence against, or
harassment of, Muslim people, and acts of violence against, or vandalism of,
Muslim community institutions, including schools, mosques, and cemeteries” as
well as “instances of propaganda in government and nongovernment media that
attempt to justify or promote racial hatred or incite acts of violence against
Muslim people.” The litany is similar to the one outlined in the 2004 law that
created the antisemitism envoy position. That law doesn’t define the bigotry it
seeks to combat either, which has never seemed to bother Republicans in
Congress. Yet many conservative legislators took pains to distinguish the
Islamophobia job, which they oppose, from the antisemitism job, which they
support.
The irony is that in warning that an overly broad
definition of anti-Muslim bigotry might infringe on individual freedom,
congressional Republicans inadvertently highlighted the ways in which an overly
broad definition of antisemitism already does. While the law creating the
antisemitism envoy didn’t offer a definition of Jew-hatred, its silence on that
point has allowed establishment Jewish groups to successfully agitate for an
extremely expansive one. And that definition has made the antisemitism envoy
exactly what congressional Republicans fear the Islamophobia envoy could
become: a threat to free speech.
After several years of overseeing an antisemitism
envoy without a formal definition of antisemitism, the State Department announced in
2011 that it had adopted one.
That definition was rooted in what the Soviet dissident turned Israeli
politician Natan Sharansky called the
“3D Test.” In a 2004 essay, Sharansky had proposed three criteria that, he
claimed, could be used to detect the presence of antisemitism in statements
critical of Israel: “demonization” (wildly exaggerated criticism),
“delegitimization” (challenging Israel’s legitimacy as a Jewish state), and
“double standards” (criticizing only Israel for actions also committed by other
countries). Following Sharansky’s lead, the State Department definition
included “applying double standards [to Israel] by requiring of it a behavior
not expected or demanded of any other democratic nation” and “denying Israel
the right to exist” among its examples of Jew-hatred. This language has serious
implications for pro-Palestinian free speech. The first example could be used
to declare a Palestinian activist antisemitic for boycotting Israel but not
other countries. The second could be used to declare that activist antisemitic
for supporting equality under the law in Israel-Palestine rather than a state
that favors Jews over Palestinians.
After 2016, when European governments adopted the
International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA)’s definition of antisemitism,
the State Department began using it as well. That definition, too, lists
applying “double standards” to Israel and “denying the Jewish people their
right to self-determination” as examples of bigotry against Jews. Donald Trump’s
appointee to the envoy position, Elan Carr, and his boss, Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo, broadened the definition of antisemitism still further by alleging that
it was antisemitic to boycott Israel, boycott Israeli settlements in the West
Bank, separately label products from Israeli settlements, or even publicize
which foreign companies operate in those settlements.
As an envoy, Carr energetically deployed this sweeping
conception of antisemitism. Last year, when the United Nations Human Rights
Office published a
list of global companies that work in West Bank settlements—which the UN
considers illegal under international law—Carr called it
an “appalling example of [anti-Israel] bias.” At Pompeo’s direction,
Carr also launched an
investigation into organizations that “support” the BDS movement. According
to Politico, Carr’s office considered labeling
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, and Oxfam antisemitic during this
process, despite the fact that none of them has taken a position on BDS. The
logic, apparently, was that their reports on Israeli human rights abuses fuel
the boycott movement. According to The Times of Israel,
opposition from career State Department officials delayed the
initiative until Carr left his post.
Carr claimed that his efforts did not threaten free
speech. “Condemnation,” he insisted,
“does not mean censorship.” But that’s not always true. In 2019, for instance,
Carr repeatedly
praised the German parliament for passing a
resolution labeling BDS antisemitic and declaring that
its supporters should not receive state funds. That resolution, according to
an open letter signed
by more than 1,500 artists, writers, and academics, “has created a repressive
climate in which cultural workers are routinely asked to formally renounce BDS,
as a prerequisite for working in Germany.”
Carr’s efforts also contributed to a repressive
climate for Palestinian rights supporters in the US. In the past, the
antisemitism envoy has focused their efforts overseas. But Carr championed his
broad definition of antisemitism domestically as well. He called Jewish
Voice for Peace, an American Jewish group that supports BDS, “an organization
that traffics in antisemitism” and celebrated a
2019 executive
order in which Trump instructed the federal
government to employ the IHRA definition when investigating antisemitism
allegations at American universities. As in Germany, this push to use the IHRA
definition and equate BDS with antisemitism has threatened free speech. In
Texas, which has adopted the
IHRA definition, a Palestinian American speech pathologist was told in
2018 that according to state law she could not work in the Austin school
district unless she pledged not to boycott Israel. A lawyer who would not sign
the anti-boycott pledge was prevented from
working as a public defender in Arizona. A newspaper in Arkansas was required to
oppose boycotts in order to receive advertising from a state university.
There’s no evidence that any of this bothers the
congressional Republicans who claim an Islamophobia envoy would menace free
expression. In fact, Rep. Reschenthaler, who last week warned that the creation
of an Islamophobia monitor could lead to the “investigation” of protected speech,
has co-sponsored legislation that
would require the Department of Education to use the IHRA definition when it
investigates allegations of campus antisemitism. Rep. McCaul, who claimed the
Islamophobia envoy bill “could be used against legitimate speech,” and Rep.
Perry, who predicted it would “silence dissent,” both support a bill to
ensure that states can pass laws denying contracts to BDS supporters—laws that
judges in Texas, Arizona,
and Arkansas have
declared unconstitutional.
Imagine if the circumstances were reversed: if
American politicians argued against an antisemitism envoy by publicly fretting
that the position would limit their ability to accuse Jews of secretly
controlling America’s banks, yet cheered on an Islamophobia envoy who promoted
laws prohibiting Americans who boycott Saudi Arabia from working in America’s
public schools. It’s hard for most American Jews to envision such a reality.
But it is the equivalent of the world in which American Muslims currently live.
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