Republican nominee in Virginia: Soros ‘inserting’ activists into school system

Glenn Youngkin, who is running for governor, claims the Jewish billionaire is partly to blame for ‘present chaos in our schools,’ even though he didn’t back school board candidates

Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gestures as he talks with supporters during a rally in Culpeper, Virginia, on October 13, 2021. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)
Virginia Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin gestures as he talks with supporters during a rally in Culpeper, Virginia, on October 13, 2021. (AP Photo/Steve Helber)

ARLINGTON, Virginia (JTA) — Glenn Youngkin, the Republican nominee for governor of Virginia, accused liberal Jewish billionaire George Soros of “inserting” political activists into the school system “disguised as school boards.”

Youngkin described “chaos” in the Virginia school system and blamed his Democratic opponent, former governor Terry McAuliffe, as well as Soros.

“The blame for these wrongs and the present chaos in our schools lay squarely, squarely at the feet of 40-year politician Terry McAuliffe,” Youngkin said to cheers Tuesday night at a rally in Burke, a town in northern Virginia. “But also, George Soros-backed allies. These allies that are in the liberal progressive movement, they’ve been inserting political operatives into our school system disguised as school boards.”

Soros has not backed Virginia school board candidates, who are mostly parents from the local community. A Youngkin spokesman pointed the Jewish Telegraphic Agency to conservative media coverage of Soros’ backing for McAuliffe and for the election of progressives as prosecutors in northern Virginia, but not for school boards. A couple of the stories about prosecutors were tangentially related to school board issues.

Jewish anti-defamation groups have said that attacks on the liberal Jewish billionaire and Holocaust survivor can cross into antisemitism, particularly when he is accused, often without basis, of working secretively to advance a far-left agenda. Soros’s political giving is in the open and he is often accused of backing initiatives with which he has no affiliation.

United States Representative Elaine Luria, a Jewish moderate Democratic congresswoman from Virginia Beach who has led criticism of members of her party’s left whom she sees as making antisemitic comments, said that Youngkin committed the same offense.

“I call it out in my own party and I’m calling it out now,” Luria said Wednesday on Twitter. “Evoking George Soros as a shadowy funder is an antisemitic conspiracy theory. This is an unacceptable statement from Glenn Youngkin.”

Hungarian-born US investor and philanthropist George Soros delivers a speech on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum annual meeting,in Davos, eastern Switzerland, on January 23, 2020. (Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images/JTA)

In 2018, supporters of former US president Donald Trump baselessly accused Soros of backing a migrant caravan headed from Mexico to the US. The gunman who killed 11 Jewish worshipers in Pittsburgh in October of that year also embraced the conspiracy theory.

Soros made headlines in 2019 when he backed a number of progressives running in Democratic primaries for prosecutor in two northern Virginia races.

Youngkin is playing up national school controversies in his campaign, promising to ban so-called “Critical Race Theory,” limit rights for transgender students and end mask mandates.

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