Share to FacebookShare to XArticle printing is available to subscribers onlyPrint in a simple, ad-free formatSubscribeComments: Zen reading is available to subscribers onlyAd-free and in a comfortable reading formatSubscribeBritain will introduce legislation to strengthen its powers to tackle proxies of hostile state actors, including by enabling bans, amid a rise in antisemitic attacks, Prime Minister Keir Starmer said, as King Charles III outlined the government's agenda in a speech to Parliament.In the NewsBritain to Target State Proxies Amid Rise in Antisemitism, Starmer SaysFar-right Minister Picks 'Jewish Values' NGO Head to Lead Antiquities AuthorityAncient Sex: Homo Erectus Interbred With Denisovans in China 400,000 Years AgoNo Judges on Oct. 7 Inquiry Commission, Likud MK Proposes in New BillMoving on Without Hamas: Gaza Board of Peace Loses Patience, Pushes Trump PlanRemembering and rebuilding two years laterICYMIWhatsApp Co-founder Donates Record-breaking $200 Million to Jerusalem HospitalThe Mysterious Copper Scroll and the End of DaysLeaked Video of Arab Lawyer's Violent Arrest Contradicts Israel Police Account'A Slave Economy': Inside Israel's ultra-Orthodox Parallel StateConstruction Begins on Bypass Road to Bring 'One Million' Israelis to West BankZionism Didn't Go Wrong, It Was Always Built This Way
Britain to target state proxies amid rise in antisemitism, Starmer says
The Plan, Outlined in King Charles III's Speech to Parliament, Would Expand Powers to Ban Groups Linked to Hostile States. It Comes Amid Rising Antisemitic Attacks, With Starmer Urging Review of the "Cumulative Effect" of Demonstrations







