Donald Trump set to appoint antisemitism envoy after two year gap
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Donald Trump set to appoint antisemitism envoy after two year gap

Elan Carr, 50, is a Los Angeles prosecutor and army veteran who served in Iraq.

Elan Carr
Elan Carr

President Donald Trump is set to appoint the State Department’s envoy for antisemitism, after leaving the post to sit empty for two years despite protests from politicians and Jewish groups.

Elan Carr, 50, is a Los Angeles prosecutor and army veteran who served in Iraq and was national president of the Jewish fraternity Alpha Epsilon Pi.

Carr was president of the fraternity from 2012 to 2014 and a member while attending the University of California, Berkeley, and North-western.

Chief Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the conference of European Rabbis, said the Orthodox rabbinical alliance “welcomes” the appointment.

He added: “Given the global climate of rising antisemitism and far-right extremism, this role is as important as it has ever been and we are pleased that it has been filled.

‘The Conference of European Rabbis will provide support, where necessary, in our combined efforts to fight rising antisemitism internationally.’

“We eagerly look forward to working with Carr, as his office combats rising antisemitism, generated from the far right, the far left, and Islamist extremists, and abetted by the ubiquitous nature of social media,” David Harris, the American Jewish Committee CEO, said in a statement.

Carr is immediately plunging into his work, heading this week to a conference on antisemitism in Bratislava organised by Slovakia, which currently holds the chair of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and then a European Union conference on antisemitism in Brussels.

He has met or planned meetings with predecessors from both Republican and Democratic administrations.

Multiple letters from Jewish groups and a bipartisan array of Congress members had urged Trump to fill the post.

Trump’s failure until now to name an envoy has been exacerbated by concerns in the Jewish community that the president has equivocated in condemning white supremacists who have endorsed and praised him, and has cultivated relationships with authoritarians who have flirted with the far right, particularly in Hungary.

The president’s defenders point to his support of Israel and his scrapping of an Iran nuclear deal reviled by Israel and many Jewish leaders.

The U.S. House of Representatives last month overwhelmingly approved a bill elevating the position to ambassador level. A 2004 law established the monitor’s post.

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