Statement from House Leadership follows joint statement from Jewish lawmakers
DENVER, CO – House Speaker Julie McCluskie and House Majority Leader Monica Duran issued the following statement after federal hate crime charges were filed in the Boulder terror attack on Jewish Coloradans:
“Yesterday’s terror attack on Colorado’s Jewish community continues a terrifying rise in antisemitism and threats against Jews, both here and abroad. We stand in solidarity with Jewish Coloradans and Jews around the world who are increasingly living in fear that they will be attacked simply for being Jewish. We agree with our Jewish colleagues that this cannot become normalized. We must commit ourselves to doing more to combat antisemitism and violence against Jews. Now is the time for Coloradans to speak up and say with one clear voice that antisemitism is unacceptable and has no place in our communities."
Earlier today, Jewish lawmakers issued a joint statement on the attack. In the statement, the lawmakers wrote, “As we mourn the victims of yesterday’s attack in Boulder, we ask our allies to speak out. Whether publicly or privately—and regardless of views on the conflict in the Middle East—we must confront hate forcefully, before it becomes normalized. The rising tide of antisemitic attacks doesn’t just threaten Jews. It threatens the very fabric of what makes America worth believing in. We should all be outraged to live in a country where this is happening—and determined to change it.”
Below is the full statement from Senators Michaelsen Jenet, Weissman, and Ball, and Representatives Sirota, Woodrow, and Weinberg:
We are outraged and heartbroken by the vicious attack at the Run for Their Lives walk in Boulder. Innocent people were severely injured for doing nothing more than raising awareness about the 58 remaining hostages held in Gaza by Hamas. Our prayers are with the victims, their families, and the entire Boulder community.
This attack should not be viewed in isolation. In April, a man broke into Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro’s residence and set it on fire while his family slept inside. In May, a Coloradan was arrested for trying to burn down the U.S. Embassy in Tel Aviv, and two people were murdered outside the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. It didn’t matter that one of the murder victims had devoted her life to peace through interfaith dialogue, just like it didn’t matter that the victims in Boulder were marching peacefully, calling for the release of hostages and an end to war. What they all had in common was that they were Jewish. We have a name for this: antisemitism.
Colorado’s Jewish community is strong and deeply rooted in our state’s history. As members of that community, we know that the attack in Boulder could have happened to any of us—some of us have even participated in Run for Their Lives events in the past. We will continue to live proudly and openly because Colorado must be a place where every Jew feels safe, supported, and free. But we cannot fight antisemitism alone—to stand up to hate, we need Coloradans to stand with us.
As we mourn the victims of yesterday’s attack in Boulder, we ask our allies to speak out. Whether publicly or privately—and regardless of views on the conflict in the Middle East—we must confront hate forcefully, before it becomes normalized. The rising tide of antisemitic attacks doesn’t just threaten Jews. It threatens the very fabric of what makes America worth believing in. We should all be outraged to live in a country where this is happening—and determined to change it.