House Democrats, Republicans spar over implementing DOGE cuts
- On Tuesday in Washington, D.C., a House Judiciary subcommittee held an emotional hearing to address the recent alarming rise in antisemitic attacks throughout the country.
- The hearing followed a year marked by over 9,300 antisemitic incidents, including assaults, firebombings, and attacks tied to political tensions and broader social unrest.
- Lawmakers and activists debated causes such as failures of progressive institutions, lax migration enforcement, and online radicalization while warning antisemitism spans political divides and ideologies.
- Representative Jared Moskowitz said, “This is a virus that is spreading,” and Jeffrey Van Drew called the problem an indication of higher social breakdown demanding urgent action.
- The hearing and related legal efforts highlight bipartisan agreement on the need to confront antisemitism through transparency, protecting civil liberties, and curbing hate fueled by misinformation online.
49 Articles
49 Articles


Testy House judiciary panel hearing on antisemitic terrorism
“This hearing ain’t gonna fix s***. Okay? This is a virus that is spreading,” said Rep. Jared Moskowitz, of Florida.The post Testy House judiciary panel hearing on antisemitic terrorism appeared first on JNS.org.
Republicans and Democrats clash over antisemitism solutions at emotional hearing
WASHINGTON, D. C. - A House Judiciary subcommittee conducted an emotional hearing Tuesday to confront what both Democrats and Republicans described as a dangerous surge in antisemitic violence across the United States.
REPLAY: House Oversight: Locking in DOGE Cuts, Ending Waste, Fraud, and Abuse
The House Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency holds a hearing titled “Locking in the DOGE Cuts: Ending Waste, Fraud, and Abuse for Good” at 10 a.m. ET on June 24. Witnesses: Matthew Dickerson, director of budget policy at the Economic Policy Innovation Center (EPIC) David Burton, senior fellow in economic policy at the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at the The Heritage Foundati…
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