New Orleans City Council to reconsider BDS resolution

City Council President Jason Williams and other council members have told the local media that they will move to reconsider the resolution at their next council meeting.

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators carrying a sign reading "DBS" (Divestment, Boycott, and Sanctions) march against US aid to Israel (photo credit: ROBYN BECK / AFP)
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators carrying a sign reading "DBS" (Divestment, Boycott, and Sanctions) march against US aid to Israel
(photo credit: ROBYN BECK / AFP)
The New Orleans City Council wants to reconsider a resolution it passed last week that lends support to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel.
The resolution to boycott investments with human rights violators, which passed the council on January 11 with all five members present voting in support, mentions neither Israel nor the Palestinian territories, but BDS and anti-Israel activists claimed the passage as a victory for their cause.
Since the vote, however, City Council President Jason Williams and other council members have told the local media that they will move to reconsider the resolution at their next council meeting.
On Wednesday, Williams called for reconsideration of the resolution, saying he was not aware of the boycott movement or its mission when he and the council voted, the New Orleans Advocate reported.
Williams also said it was a mistake for the council to introduce and vote on the unadvertised measure at the end of a nearly six-hour meeting, and acknowledged that the City Council did not provide enough time for people to voice their opinions.
The adopted text “encourages the creation of a process to… avoid contracting with or investing in corporations whose practices consistently violate human rights.”
Five of the seven City Council members, including the mayor-elect, co-sponsored the resolution. The New Orleans Palestinian Solidarity Committee pushed the resolution; committee members reportedly crafted its language. Mayor-elect LaToya Cantrell wrote and introduced the measure as part of her Welcoming Cities initiative, the local television station WWL-TV reported.
“Let me be very clear to citizens of New Orleans and citizens of the world — this City Council is not anti-Israel,” Williams said, according to the Advocate. “That sentiment is inconsistent with the council’s actions and certainly mine personally.”
Resolutions do not have the same force of law as an ordinance.
At the start of the January 11 City Council meeting, the Jewish Federation of Greater New Orleans was honored with “a special proclamation for their tremendous philanthropic work and positive impact on the entire New Orleans community.” Its Community Relations Council opposed the measure, saying it was voted on without the opportunity for dissenting voices to be heard.
The Anti-Defamation League also criticized the resolution and the way that it was introduced.
Cantrell, who takes office in four months, told WWL-TV that she would seek the Jewish community’s advice in revising the resolution and work to establish better relations with the Jewish community.
“What I’m doing now is pretty much just listening to the Jewish community in terms of what would revisions look like,” Cantrell said. “Because, without any mention of the Jewish community, without any mention of the Palestinian community, I’m really looking for guidance from the Jewish community as to what would need to change.”