Holocaust Museum Board Urges Schumer to Oust Sanders Over Longstanding Absences and Remarks
Several members of the governing board of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum are pressing Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York to remove Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont from the United States Holocaust Memorial Council, citing years of nonparticipation and concerns about his public statements, according to a report by JNS.
Sanders, who was appointed to the council in 2007, holds a seat on the panel of presidential and congressional appointees that convenes twice annually to guide the museum’s mission, educational initiatives, and public programming. Attendance records reviewed by board members and shared with the New York Post indicate, however, that Sanders “has missed every meeting of the board since his appointment.”
In a letter dated January 13 and signed by a dozen council members, the group told Schumer that Sanders “has rarely, if ever, attended council meetings or participated meaningfully in the work of the council since his appointment.”
The letter also raised objections to Sanders’s public rhetoric regarding “contemporary genocidal conflicts, including characterizations widely viewed as inconsistent with the principles of Holocaust remembrance and genocide prevention.”
Sanders has frequently criticized Israeli government policy and, in September, accused Israel of committing “genocide” in Gaza, marking the first time he used that term to describe the current war.
The Vermont senator also sharply condemned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s visit to Washington last July for a meeting with President Donald Trump.
Sanders described the occasion as “a shameful day in America,” pointing to arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court against Netanyahu and then-Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on allegations of “war crimes.”
Although neither Israel nor the United States recognizes the ICC as a governing authority, Sanders wrote, “Today, a war criminal under indictment from the ICC will be welcomed to the White House.”
Separately, in late July, the Senate voted down a resolution introduced by Sanders that sought to block U.S. weapons transfers to Israel.
That measure failed by a 27-70 margin, marking the third unsuccessful effort by Sanders since late 2024 to stop American arms deliveries to Israel.
{Matzav.com}