曼达尼首次否决引发两党反犹太主义法案后陷入舆论漩涡:“令人失望”


2026-04-24T19:00:10-04:00 / 福克斯新闻网

纽约市议会发言人朱莉·梅宁将该法案描述为打击反犹太主义的关键举措,并提及议会可能推翻否决

撰稿人:利奥·布里塞尼奥,福克斯新闻网

发布时间:2026年4月24日美国东部时间晚7:00 | 更新时间:2026年4月24日美国东部时间晚7:17

[‘The Five’: 奥巴马与曼达尼一同参与幼儿园读故事活动]

《The Five》栏目主持人讨论了前总统巴拉克·奥巴马与纽约市市长佐赫兰·曼达尼一同在布朗克斯幼儿园为孩子们朗读、唱歌的画面。

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纽约市市长佐赫兰·曼达尼因首次行使否决权,否决了一项旨在通过加强教育场所抗议安全保障措施来打击反犹太主义的两党法案,从而引发强烈反弹。
“这可能会影响抗议移民海关执法局的工人、要求学校停止投资化石燃料的大学生,或是声援巴勒斯坦人权利的示威者,”曼达尼在周五的一份声明中说道。
“这项法案在全市范围内引发了劳工运动、生殖权利组织、移民权益倡导者等群体的强烈担忧,”他补充道。

纽约前民主党州长安德鲁·科莫曾以独立候选人身份在去年的市长选举中对阵曼达尼,他严厉抨击了曼达尼的决定,称其“在反犹太主义抬头之际,选择了激进极左翼民主党社会主义者组织(DSA)的心血来潮,而非学生和犹太纽约市民的安全”。

曼达尼对犹太纽约市民构成生存威胁

佐赫兰·曼达尼在布鲁克林公共图书馆绿点分馆宣布其团队新成员,布鲁克林,2025年12月17日周三。(肖恩·英吉马/《纽约每日新闻》/论坛新闻服务社 via 盖蒂图片社)
“曼达尼没有为所有纽约市民治理,而是从纽约市的官方文件中删除了反犹太主义的定义,更改了反犹太主义犯罪的统计方式,如今又在最需要这些常识性安全措施的时候否决了它们,”科莫继续说道。“我自豪地与我的犹太兄弟姐妹站在一起——正如科莫家族一贯所做的,也将永远如此。”

该法案编号为Int. 175-B,要求纽约执法部门制定一项计划,以应对教育机构内可能出现的人身阻碍、身体伤害、恐吓和干扰行为,同时仍保障集会自由和第一修正案赋予的活动权利。该计划随后将适用于“任何开展教育项目的建筑、结构或场所”。

纽约市议会发言人朱莉·梅宁曾将该法案描述为抵御反犹太主义威胁的关键举措。
“这项法案是议会牵头的五点反犹太主义行动计划的一部分,”梅宁在3月份曾表示。

特朗普之子就读的精英大学打压左翼学生激进分子

纽约市议会发言人朱莉·梅宁在纽约布鲁克林区出席发布会时发言,2026年1月12日周一。(约翰·兰帕尔斯基/彭博社)

“根据纽约警察局的数据,2025年反犹太主义事件占报告仇恨犯罪的57%,尽管犹太居民仅占纽约市总人口的10%左右。犹太纽约市民遭遇仇恨犯罪的数量超过了其他所有群体的总和。”

该法案于上月末以30票赞成、19票反对在纽约市议会获得通过。

网络上的评论者批评了此次否决,称加强保护措施势在必行。
“我们对曼达尼市长否决这项旨在保护学生免受学校外恐吓和干扰的法案深感失望。抗议权和受教育权能够也必须共存。我们敦促市议会推翻此次否决,重申一项基本原则:保护学生不是政治问题,而是公民责任,”亲犹太组织西蒙·维森塔尔中心在X平台上发帖称。
“市长佐赫兰·曼达尼(民主党-哈马斯)否决了学校周边缓冲区法案,因为该法案‘可能会影响抗议移民海关执法局的工人、要求学校停止投资化石燃料的大学生,或是声援巴勒斯坦人权利的示威者’。而该法案本只需要求学校周边与执法部门合作制定明确的安全计划,”政治评论员阿里·霍夫曼在他的帖子中写道。

值得注意的是,曼达尼此前批准了一项适用于宗教场所的类似法案。他解释称,自己担忧第二项法案中对“教育设施”的定义范围过广。
“问题在于该法案对教育机构的定义过于宽泛,且引发了关于纽约市民基本抗议权利的宪法担忧。按照目前法案的措辞,从大学到博物馆再到教学医院,所有场所都可能受到限制,”曼达尼在一份声明中说道。

纽约拉比警告佐赫兰·曼达尼“对犹太社区安全构成威胁”

曼哈顿中城天际线与帝国大厦日落景象,纽约市,2024年11月15日。(加里·赫肖恩/盖蒂图片社)

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根据纽约市宪章,市议会可以以三分之二的票数推翻市长的否决。这需要议会50名议员中的33人投赞成票。

假设该法案仍能获得最初推动其在议会通过的议员的支持,那么仅需再争取3票,就能在曼达尼反对的情况下使法案生效。

利奥·布里塞尼奥是福克斯新闻数字频道国会团队的政治记者,此前曾供职于《世界杂志》。

Mamdani in the hot seat after first veto derails bipartisan effort to combat antisemitism: ‘Disappointed’

2026-04-24T19:00:10-04:00 / Fox News

Speaker Julie Menin framed the legislation as key to combating antisemitism, raising the possibility of a council override

By Leo Briceno, Fox News

Published April 24, 2026 7:00pm EDT | Updated April 24, 2026 7:17pm EDT

[‘The Five’: Obama joins Mamdani for preschool storytime]

‘The Five’ co-hosts discuss former President Barack Obama reading and singing with Bronx preschoolers alongside New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani.

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New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani is sparking backlash after using his first veto to derail a bipartisan bill aimed at combating antisemitism by expanding protest security safeguards for places of education.

“This could impact workers protesting ICE, or college students demanding their school divest from fossil fuels or demonstrating in support of Palestinian rights,” Mamdani said in a statement on Friday.

“It is a piece of legislation that has alarmed much of the labor movement, reproductive rights groups and immigration advocates, among others, across this city,” he continued.

New York’s former Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who ran as an independent against Mamdani in the mayoral race last year, slammed Mamdani’s decision, saying he “chose the whims of his radical, extreme-left DSA base over the safety of students and Jewish New Yorkers at a time of rising antisemitism.”

MAMDANI IS AN EXISTENTIAL THREAT TO JEWISH NEW YORKERS

Zohran Mamdani announces new members of his team at the Brooklyn Public Library Greenpoint Branch in Brooklyn, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025.(Shawn Inglima/ New York Daily News/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

“Instead of governing for all NYers, Mamdani has repealed the very definition of antisemitism from the city’s books, changed how antisemitic crimes are counted and now vetoed these commonsense security measures when they are needed most,” Cuomo continued. “I proudly stand shoulder to shoulder with my Jewish brothers and sisters — just as the Cuomos always have, and always will.”

The bill, Int. 175-B, requires New York law enforcement to develop a plan to contain the risk of physical obstruction, physical injury, intimidation and interference at educational facilities while still allowing for freedom of assembly and First-Amendment events. The plan would then apply to “any building, structure, or place where educational programming takes place.”

Julie Menin, the speaker of the New York City Council, had framed the bill as key to warding off threats of antisemitism.

“The legislation is part of the Council-led Five-Point Action Plan to Combat Antisemitism,” Menin had said in March.

ELITE UNIVERSITY ATTENDED BY TRUMP’S SON CRACKS DOWN ON LEFT-WING STUDENT AGITATORS

Julie Menin, speaker of the New York City Council, speaks during an announcement in the Brooklyn borough of New York City on Monday, Jan. 12, 2026.(John Lamparski/Bloomberg)

“According to the NYPD, antisemitic incidents accounted for 57% of reported hate crimes in 2025, although only approximately 10% of New York City residents are Jewish. Jewish New Yorkers were the targets of hate crimes more than all other groups combined.”

The bill passed the New York City Council by a 30-19 vote late last month.

Commentators online criticized the veto, citing a need for enhanced protections.

“We are deeply disappointed by Mayor Mamdani’s veto of legislation designed to help protect students from intimidation and disruption outside schools. The right to protest and the right to an education can and must coexist. We urge the City Council to override this veto and reaffirm a basic principle: protecting students is not politics; it is a civic responsibility,” the Simon Wiesenthal Center, a pro-Jewish group, said in a post to X.

“Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D- HAMAS) vetoed a bill for buffer zones around schools because it ‘could impact workers protesting ICE, or college students demanding their school divest from fossil fuels, or demonstrating in support of Palestinian rights.’ All the bill would have done was require clear safety plans around schools with law enforcement,” Ari Hoffman, a political commentator, wrote in his own post.

Notably, Mamdani approved a very similar bill that applied to religious sites. He explained that he was concerned by expansive range of what the second bill meant by “educational facilities.”

“The problem is how widely this bill defines an educational institution and the constitutional concerns it raises regarding New Yorkers’ fundamental right to protest. As the bill is written, everywhere from universities to museums to teaching hospitals could face restrictions,” Mamdani said in a statement.

NYC RABBI WARNS ZOHRAN MAMDANI ‘POSES A DANGER’ TO JEWISH COMMUNITY’S SAFETY

The sun sets on the skyline of midtown Manhattan and the Empire State Building in New York City on Nov. 15, 2024.(Gary Hershorn/Getty Images)

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The City Council could override a mayoral veto with a two-thirds vote, according toNew York City’s charter.Doing so would require 33 of the chamber’s 50 members.

Assuming the bill retains the support of the legislators that originally advanced it out of the council, it would require just three more votes to secure its implementation over Mamdani’s objection.

Leo Briceno is a politics reporter for the congressional team at Fox News Digital. He was previously a reporter with World Magazine.

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