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The California Legislative Jewish Caucus (CLJC) is a bipartisan, bicameral group of state legislators primarily dedicated to Jewish institutional interests, promoting Holocaust education and remembrance, countering antisemitism and anti-Israel narratives, supporting Israel in schools and college campuses, and strengthening California–Israel economic, technological and cultural ties. It was established in 2012 and is the first official legislative Jewish caucus in the United States. [1] [2] [3] [4]
The CLJC employs staff paid through the State Assembly but is not a separate legal entity and has no independent budget or bank account. Its “budget” accomplishments (e.g. $80 million/year for 2024-25) [5] are state funding allocations it successfully advocates for in the annual California Budget Act. [6] [7] [8]
The CLJC successfully advocated for the incorporation of the IHRA definition of antisemitism in California's K-12 Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (ESMC). [9] [10] [11] Since 2021, the CLJC's legislative efforts related to Jewish institutional interests and Israel have intensified alongside broader Tikkun Olam themed social-justice programs. [12] [13] [14] The CLJC has been criticized for misleading, unethical, and undemocratic legislation, mostly in support of Israel. [15] [16] [17]
In 2012 Assemblymembers Marty Block, Bob Blumenfield, and Speaker John A. Pérez established the CLJC as the nation's first official legislative Jewish caucus, initially comprising eight Senators, three Assembly members, and three non‐Jewish associate members—twelve Democrats and two Republicans—while convening the monthly “Capitol Knesset” for Jewish legislators, staff, and advocates to network and discuss policy priorities.
Its first major legislative initiative was spearheading SCR 121 (2014), formally endorsing the California–Israel memorandum of understanding (MOU) signed March 5, 2014 by Governor Jerry Brown and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which noted $4.2 billion in two‐way trade in 2013 and committed both parties to:
By codifying support for the MOU into state resolutions (SCR 121 2014; SCR 25 2015; SB 1376 2016), the CLJC positioned itself as the de facto conduit for California–Israel economic collaboration. [1] [2] [18] [19]
SCR 121 (2014) and SCR 25 (2015) both include the explicit assertion that collaboration with Israel under the California-Israel MOA “will foster peace and democracy in the Middle East”. [20] [21]
In February 2016, CLJC introduced AB 2844, also known as California's anti-BDS law, prohibiting companies from “participating in a boycott of the State of Israel, known as the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement”. [22]
In 2016, CLJC's website symbol hadn't switched to a multi-colored Jewish star and instead featured an Israel flag. [24]
Early in this period, CLJC established a formal partnership with JPAC (Jewish Public Affairs Committee of California). [25]
During this period CLJC worked to include "guardrails" in the ethnic studies legislation to “provide clear direction to local school districts and the California Department of Education that anti-Jewish and anti-Israel content cannot be included in the teaching of ethnic studies" [28] [3] [29] and to incorporate the IHRA definition of antisemitism in the Ethnic Studies Model Curriculum (ESMC). [10] [11]
2019 saw the passage of Assembly Bill 1548, which formally established the California Nonprofit Security Grant Program—legislation that would become a cornerstone of the caucus’s advocacy work in subsequent years. [30]
- 2019-20 Allocation: Historic surge to $64.3 million, including $15 million to Nonprofit Security Grant Program, $6 million for Holocaust Museum expansion, and $23.5 million for Jewish camp reconstruction after wildfires. [31] [32]
Pandemic belt-tightening reduced new wins to roughly $31.9 million, but the caucus still protected core survivor services and kept security-grant funding flowing even as many discretionary programs were slashed statewide.
The 2021–22 CLJC state budget rebounded with $80 million. It allocated: [33]
Lawmakers declared a “record year,” locking in $141.2 million across seven projects, including $36 million for a three-year Holocaust Survivor Assistance Program and $40 million to finish camp-rebuild work. [34] [35]
Facing a $30 billion deficit, overall caucus wins initially fell to about $24.7 million. Still, $20 million went to a scaled-back security-grant round, and Governor Newsom later added another $20 million in emergency funds after the October 7 attack to nearly double that pool to $44.7 million. [36] [37] [38]
The legislature took the unprecedented step of approving a two-year, $160 million commitment — $80 million per year — locking in long-term stability for the security-grant program and adding smaller sums for Holocaust-education consortia and asylum-seeker services
Key elements include:
AB 57 (Gabriel): Implements State Auditor recommendations to improve hate-crime, anti-Semitic and anti-Israel data collection and reporting by law enforcement and the California Department of Justice. Introduced 2021; advanced in Assembly Public Safety Committee. [41]
AB 587 (Gabriel): Requires social-media platforms to publicly disclose content-moderation practices related to hate, disinformation, extremism, harassment, antisemitic, and anti-Israel content. Sponsored by CLJC; supported by ADL, JPAC, AJC, and other groups. [42] [43]
AB 1126 (Bloom): Establishes the California Commission on the State of Hate & Violent Extremism, monitoring anti-Semitic and anti-Israel activity and recommending policies to the Legislature and state agencies. [44]
SB 693 (Stern): Develops and promotes resources for teacher training and curriculum through the creation of the Governor's Council on Genocide and Holocaust Education, which includes the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Simon Wiesenthal Center (Museum of Tolerance), USC Shoah Foundation, Jewish Family and Children's Services (JFCS) Holocaust Center, Holocaust Museum LA, Facing History and Ourselves, and the Jewish Partisan Educational Foundation (JPEF). [45] [46] [47] [48]
SB 1287 (Glazer): Requires public colleges and universities to update and expand student-conduct codes to prevent behavior defined as harassment, intimidation, violence and discrimination, particularly against pro-Israel students by pro-Palestinian activists. [49] [50] [4]
AB 2925 (Friedman): Requires that any campus that chooses to provide DEI training must include training about anti-Semitic and anti-Israel discrimination against Jews. [4] [46] [51]
AB 3024 (Ward): Stop Hate Littering Act criminalizes distribution of pro-Palestinian and other flyers, posters, or symbols defined as hateful or as being intended to terrorize. [52] [53] [54] [55]
SB 1277 (Stern): Establishes a statewide professional-development program under the Department of Education for grades 7-12: The California Teachers Collaborative for Holocaust and Genocide Education, which includes the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), Simon Wiesenthal Center (Museum of Tolerance), USC Shoah Foundation, Jewish Family and Children's Services (JFCS) Holocaust Center, Holocaust Museum LA, Facing History and Ourselves, and the Jewish Partisan Educational Foundation (JPEF). [56] [57] [58] [46] [59]
AB 715 (Zbur, Addis): Creates a state Antisemitism Prevention Coordinator to monitor K-12 and prohibits historical narratives deemed anti-Israel by the Coordinator. Prohibits accounts that minimize the nature and extent of antisemitic incidents and violence as determined by Pro-Israel organizations. Prohibits comparisons of Israel with Nazi Germany and Jews or Israelis with Nazis. States that language or content which “directly or indirectly questions Israel's right to exist” amounts to discriminatory conduct toward Jewish students. Prohibits “dual loyalty” assertions that American Jews have loyalty to both Israel and the US. Strengthens Uniform Complaint Process. [60] [61] [62]
AB 1468 (Zbur; Addis): Narrows high school ethnic-studies curriculum to a U.S.-only framework, excluding global perspectives on colonialism and Palestine-related education. Introduces new “guardrails”, public-hearing and wait period requirements for every ethnic-studies course and instructional material. [63] [64] [65]
Since 2021, CLJC's legislative efforts related to Jewish institutional interests and Israel have intensified alongside broader social-justice programs—most visibly its annual Tikkun Olam bill packages that translate core Jewish values into policy proposals on homelessness, mental health, environmental justice, affordable housing, and algorithmic fairness. [12] [13] [14]
Co-Chairs: Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino), Senator Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco).
Vice Chairs: Assemblymember Dawn Addis (D-Morro Bay), Senator Josh Becker (D-Menlo Park). [66]
CLJC legislation has been criticized by the President of the Council of UC Faculty Associations, California Teachers Association, CAIR and others for stifling criticism of Israel, censoring Palestine and creating a climate of fear. [15] [67] [68]
The Washington Legal Foundation and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit concluded that CLJC's AB 587 violates the First Amendment. [16]
CLJC and its co-chair Scott Wiener have been criticized by Jewish Voice for Peace for "twist[ing] criticism [of Israel] into antisemitism" [69] and for opposing a Gaza cease-fire resolution in Sacramento. [70]
CAIR has criticized CLJC for commending California State University Chancellor Mildred García placing Sonoma State University President Mike Lee on leave [71] after Lee announced support for an academic boycott of Israel in agreement with protesters, Students for Justice in Palestine, [72] [73] [74] and the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, which Wiener described as "horrific and wrong". [75] [76] [77]
A Counterpunch article describes CLJC legislation as “designed to protect Israeli apartheid and genocide“. [17]