NYU Law Students Remove President of Bar Association Who Blamed Israel for Hamas Massacre
The move comes after Workman wrote in a weekly newsletter after the attack that “Israel bears full responsibility for this tremendous loss of life.” She also refused to “condemn Palestinian resistance,” arguing “this regime of state-sanctioned violence created conditions that made resistance necessary.”
The online vote, which was triggered by a “no confidence” petition signed by 25 percent of the student body, closed Wednesday after being held open for a week. Of the 1,176 students who voted , 707 said Workman should not remain in office, while 428 voted to retain Workman and 41 abstained. [...]
Soon after [Workman’s comments], NYU Law’s SBA issued a message saying its members “did not write, approve, or see this message before it was published,” nor did they “hold discussions about whether to issue a public statement about the conflict or the content of any potential statement.” The letter goes on to state that the SBA board initiated Workman’s removal as president, which requires a majority vote of the entire law school student body.
The student said that the SBA’s hearings on whether to oust Workman — which it mentioned in its message — were “never able to happen because all SBA members resigned.” Instead, the entire NYU Law School student body voted Workman out, in accordance with the university’s bylaws . ( National Review )
When given the opportunity to retract her comments, Workman refused , telling ABC News she "will continue to speak up for Palestinian human rights and use whatever platform I have available to me to call for a ceasefire and end this occupation that's harming the Palestinians.”
The same day, Workman, who also had her job offer rescinded , was filmed defacing posters of kidnapped Israelis.