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Arizona governor vetoes bill banning antisemitic teaching in public schools

Democrat Katie Hobbs called the law an ‘attack on teachers’ and claimed it would have had a limited impact in combatting bigotry

June 11, 2025 09:43
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Arizona governor Katie Hobbs has vetoed a bill that would have banned the teaching of antisemitic material in public school (Image: Getty)
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Arizona’s governor, Katie Hobbs, has vetoed a bill that would have banned the teaching of antisemitic material in the state’s public schools, community colleges and universities.

House Bill 2867, sponsored by Republican representative Michael Way, cleared the legislature last week by a margin of 33-20 with the backing of several Democrats.

If implemented, it would have banned the teaching or promotion of antisemitism in public school, requiring students to advocate for antisemitic positions and make it a specific offence for teachers to provide antisemitic professional guidance or call for the genocide of any group.

The bill was based on the IHRA definition of antisemitism, which critics – including some Jewish organisations in the state – claimed could compromise teachers’ ability to provide comprehensive Holocaust education and could stifle legitimate criticism of Israel and discussion of Middle Eastern affairs.