The White House just released what it calls the first national strategy to combat antisemitism.
With the prevalence of antisemitic conspiracy theories in U.S. politics and American culture, like the white supremacist “replacement theory,” the White House’s announcement Thursday effectively unveiled plans for a full-court press against anti-Jewish hate.
President Joe Biden, who often speaks of how the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, inspired him to run for president, referred to the 2017 incident again in a written statement accompanying the strategy.
He wrote:
Six years ago, Neo-Nazis marched from the shadows through Charlottesville, Virginia, chanting, ‘Jews will not replace us.’ With torches in hand, they spewed the same antisemitic bile and hate that were heard across Europe in the 1930s. What happened in Charlottesville—the horror of that moment, the violence that followed, and the threat it represented for American democracy—drove me to run for President. The very soul of our Nation was hanging in the balance. It still is today.
Biden’s statement makes clear that this plan could be a model for strategies to combat other forms of hate.
“The Strategy—which reflects input from over 1,000 Jewish community stakeholders, faith and civil rights leaders, State and local officials, and more—also serves as a blueprint for tackling other forms of bigotry, hate, and bias that fuel toxic divisions in America,” the president wrote.








