Trump Administration Launches Nationwide Anti-Semitism Task Force Tour
DOJ launches unprecedented nationwide awareness campaign • Acting Attorney General pledges zero tolerance for anti-Jewish hatred | 15 cities to receive federal support (Antisemitism)

The Trump administration has announced an ambitious nationwide initiative to combat the alarming rise in antisemitic incidents across America, with Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche unveiling plans for a 15-city National Awareness and Action Tour by the Federal Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism.
"President Trump has made clear that this Administration will not tolerate antisemitism, and the Department of Justice is committed to implementing that directive," Acting Attorney General Blanche stated in announcing the initiative. "This national tour is an important step in ensuring communities across the country know the federal government stands ready to work with them to confront antisemitic threats, protect public safety, and uphold civil rights."
The announcement comes at a critical moment for American Jewish communities, which have faced unprecedented levels of harassment, violence, and discrimination in recent years. From violent assaults on Jewish individuals to the normalization of anti-Jewish rhetoric in political discourse, the scope of the crisis has prompted federal intervention on a scale not seen in decades.
The task force's 15-city tour represents a comprehensive federal response designed to coordinate local, state, and federal resources in protecting Jewish communities. Each stop will bring together law enforcement officials, community leaders, and civil rights advocates to develop tailored strategies for addressing antisemitic threats in their regions.

A Crisis Demanding Federal Action
The timing of this initiative reflects the severity of antisemitism's spread across multiple sectors of American society. Recent incidents have exposed how deeply anti-Jewish hatred has penetrated mainstream political discourse, with Democratic candidate Maureen Galindo in Texas openly pledging to establish internment camps for American Zionists while promoting conspiracy theories about Jewish control of media and Hollywood.
The federal government has already demonstrated its willingness to use financial leverage to combat institutional antisemitism. Columbia University currently faces scrutiny over more than $5 billion in federal grants following its failure to adequately address the harassment of Jewish students on campus. Education Secretary Linda McMahon condemned the university's response, noting that "Jewish students have been assaulted and harassed—elite universities overrun by antisemitic agitators."
Coordinated Federal Response
The National Awareness and Action Tour will focus on several key objectives: establishing direct communication channels between federal authorities and local Jewish communities, training local law enforcement on identifying and responding to antisemitic hate crimes, coordinating prosecutorial strategies across jurisdictions, and developing community-specific threat assessments and protection plans.
Each city on the tour will receive a comprehensive assessment of antisemitic threats in their region, along with federal resources to address identified vulnerabilities. The Department of Justice emphasized that this initiative represents a long-term commitment rather than a temporary response, with plans to establish permanent federal-local partnerships in combating anti-Jewish hatred.

The task force will work closely with the Community Security Trust and similar organizations that have been documenting the surge in antisemitic incidents. These partnerships will ensure that federal resources are deployed based on actual community needs and threat assessments rather than political considerations.
For Jewish communities across America who have watched with growing alarm as antisemitism has spread from college campuses to city streets, from social media platforms to political campaigns, the federal government's commitment to this nationwide tour represents a significant acknowledgment that the threat requires coordinated action at the highest levels. The success of this initiative will depend not only on federal resources but on the willingness of local communities and institutions to confront antisemitism wherever it emerges.