The US Jewish historian Deborah Lipstadt was approved as the State Department’s Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Antisemitism by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Tuesday, following several months of intense political wrangling over Republican objections to her nomination.

Lipstadt — a recognized expert on antisemitism and a professor of Jewish Studies at Emory University in Atlanta — was approved by a 13-9 vote at the committee. Two Republican Senators, Mitt Romney (NH) and Marco Rubio (FL), voted with their Democratic colleagues in favor of Lipstadt.

The approval will now be put to a vote of the full US Senate for confirmation, a requirement stemming from the upgrade of the Special Envoy’s position to the rank of ambassador by a bipartisan vote of the US House of Representatives in Dec. 2020.

Originally nominated for the post by President Joe Biden last July, Lipstadt’s confirmation was held up by Republican unease with her perceived partisan politics. Much of the dispute centered on a tweet by Lipstadt last year accusing Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) of “white supremacy.” At a hearing in February that was addressed by Lipstadt, Johnson asked her pointedly why she would “level these vile and horrible charges against people, including me that you don’t even know?” Lipstadt, who deleted and apologized for the offending tweet, explained to the hearing that she was an “equal opportunity foe” of antisemitism on both left and right.... Read More: Algemeiner