Republican presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee has one less speaking engagement on his agenda.
Amid calls for a boycott of the Jewish National Fund of Ottawa’s annual Negev Dinner over their choice of Huckabee as keynote speaker, the organization cancelled the former Arkansas governor’s speech, and announced that it would seek a less divisive replacement. The decision came shortly after Kingston resident Bruce Bursey launched a change.org petition, demanding the JNF find a different speaker for the dinner, which aims to raise funds for Autism research in Israel. Bursey accused the former Fox News host of spreading “hatefulness towards and about transgender people.”
At the National Religious Broadcasters Convention in early June, Huckabee called transgenderism a “social experiment” and mused that, had he known about transgender identity in high-school, “I’m pretty sure I would’ve found my feminine side and said, ‘Coach, I think I’d rather shower with the girls today.”
JNF CEO Josh Cooper told The Canadian Jewish News that Bursey’s petition “had absolutely no impact whatsoever” on the decision to cancel Huckabee’s speech. But in an email statement to msnbc, Cooper said the organization had been forced to rescind Huckabee’s invitation after “the media spotlight” put focus on “Mr. Huckabee’s comments about issues that bear no relevance to JNF or autism.” Cooper explained that the JNF had initially chosen Huckabee because “he is a staunch supporter of the State of Israel” and “has never wavered from this position.”
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The controversy illustrates a growing political tension in the Jewish communities of North America between members who prioritize social liberalism and those more concerned with promoting unconditional support for the Israeli state. With the rise of the far-right in Israel, and the evangelical movement in the United States and Canada, the Jewish state’s staunchest supporters in the western hemisphere increasingly look like Huckabee: Christian conservatives with right-leaning views on social policy.








