JANUARY 29, 2024:
Extended version:
JANUARY 24, 2024:
By Austin Goss, South Dakota Broadcasters Association.
PIERRE – Legislation that would define antisemitism in state law sailed to easy victory in the South Dakota State House Tuesday (Jan. 23, 2024), despite bipartisan concerns about what the bill could mean for free speech, and if it was creating a “protected class.”
The lower chamber voted 53 to 14 to pass the bill off to the Senate. If signed into law, it would formally define antisemitism in state law – and ultimately require the Department of Labor’s Division of Human Rights to consider the definition when investigating potential violations that come before the Human Rights Commission.
The definition is drawn from the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, the “gold standard” for defining antisemitism, according to the bill’s prime sponsor.
“Those of you who know me, know that I am the son of a Holocaust survivor,” Deutsch told his colleagues. “My grandparents and other family were killed in concentration camps in World War Two.” (2:20)
The legislation’s easy passage was not indicative of the path that it took to get to the House. Every lawyer on the House Judiciary Committee voted against its passage when it was heard there last week.
One of those lawyers was Rep. Scott Odenbach of Spearfish.
“We are starting to carve out special groups with this, we have to be careful when we go down that path,” said Odenbach. “Who knows where that will end if we start doing that in South Dakota.”
However, one of those lawyer committee members who had previously opposed the bill flipped their position when it came to the floor.
Speaker Pro Tempore Mike Stevens of Yankton spoke in favor of the bill – explaining that he had a difficult time squaring away his previous no vote in committee.
“I have spent a lot of time thinking about this bill and have had time to reflect,” Stevens said, through tears. “Do I think this bill is perfect? No… Sometimes the message of a bill is more important than the actual words of it. This will send a message to all South Dakotans that we have not forgotten about the atrocities that happened during World War Two.”
Other concerns raised by Democrats in the House included questions about why the legislation only defined discriminatory actions against Jewish people. During questioning on the bill, Deutsch admitted that the existing statute likely already protected Jewish people from discrimination.
Democrat Kameron Nelson had an amendment that he did not put to the floor that would have defined discrimination against other protected classes – such as Native Americans and immigrants – similarly to the way the bill defined Jewish discrimination.
“We have other communities begging for help, asking for protection,” said Nelson. “We should find our humanity in calling out to different communities who want that help.” Nelson and his Democratic colleagues all voted to pass the bill.
The bill was one of a few pieces of legislation to be mentioned by Gov. Kristi Noem as a priority during her State of the State address earlier this month. It heads now to the Senate, where it already enjoys the sponsorship of seven lawmakers there.
JANUARY 23, 2024:
ATLANTA (AP) — A bill to define antisemitism in Georgia law stalled in 2023 over how it should be worded. But a revised version won unanimous endorsement from a key Senate committee Monday, backed by Republican support for Israel in its war with Hamas and a surge in reported bias incidents against Jewish people in the state.
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