Florida Congressional Race Devolves into Antisemitism
A Florida congressional race has escalated into a broader political fight involving antisemitism, Israel, Azerbaijan and Armenian-American activism, after Rep. Randy Fine and candidate Dan Bilzerian traded accusations in a widening public feud.

A Florida congressional race has escalated into a broader political fight involving antisemitism, Israel, Azerbaijan and Armenian-American activism, after Rep. Randy Fine and candidate Dan Bilzerian traded accusations in a widening public feud.
The clash began after Fine criticized Bilzerian following the release of an Israeli Diaspora Ministry report that ranked the social media personality as the world’s leading antisemitic influencer for 2025.
Bilzerian, a dual US-Armenian citizen best known for his online persona, recently entered the congressional race despite having little political background in Florida. He has drawn repeated criticism in recent years for inflammatory comments about Jews and Israel.
During a 2024 livestream, Bilzerian called to “exterminate Israel” and said, “give me a rifle and send me the f*** over there,” remarks widely interpreted as advocating violence against Israelis. He also described Hamas as a “resistance organization” after the October 7 massacre and referred to former Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar as “a hero.” He has also referred to Fine as a “fat Jew.”
The rhetoric intensified over the past week as Bilzerian posted messages on X targeting Jews, Israel and Fine personally. His posts included references to “Jewish supremacist parasites,” claims that Fine entered politics to help Jews and Israel, and broader allegations involving Jewish power and Israeli citizenship.
Jewish organizations and pro-Israel commentators accused Bilzerian of spreading antisemitic conspiracy theories rather than engaging in criticism of Israeli policy.
The dispute then widened after Fine appeared in a media segment discussing antisemitism and dual citizenship in American politics. A short clip circulated online showing Fine saying, “We don’t want Armenians to be able to serve in Congress.”
Armenian-American activists condemned the remark as discriminatory. Fine’s supporters argued that the clip omitted the broader context, in which he was arguing that members of Congress should not hold foreign citizenship or foreign allegiances.
Fine later restated the position online, writing that Armenians, Somalis, Guatemalans and Israelis should not serve in Congress if they are citizens of foreign countries.
The Armenian National Committee of America responded sharply, accusing Fine of anti-Armenian rhetoric and linking his comments to his support for Azerbaijan. The group also criticized legislation tied to US policy toward Baku after Azerbaijan’s 2023 military operation in Karabakh, internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan but previously controlled by Armenian separatists.
The argument has revived tensions over Israel’s strategic partnership with Azerbaijan, including defense cooperation and arms sales. Armenian advocacy groups have long accused Israel of helping Azerbaijan, while Israeli and Azerbaijani officials have rejected those claims.
The fight has now moved far beyond a local congressional race, becoming a broader online clash over antisemitism, Israel, Armenian activism, Azerbaijan and the use of dual-loyalty accusations in American politics.