How American views on Israel and antisemitism have changed since Oct. 7

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By MAYA SWEEDLER

WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly two years after the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in Israel and the country’s ensuing invasion of the Gaza Strip, Americans are more divided on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict than they were before the war – and concerns are mounting about the safety of Jewish communities at home.

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The partisan split in public opinion on Israel predates the current war with Hamas, but recent polling suggests that some Americans have lost sympathy with the Israelis over the course of the war. Even as Israel and Hamas begin indirect talks over a U.S.-proposed peace plan that’s drawn international support, these shifts in public opinion could outlast the current conflict.

The war has amplified debates in the U.S. not just about foreign policy, but also about the safety and visibility of Jewish communities in America, where fears of discrimination are rising alongside growing divides over Israel. The same polls show that U.S. adults are also concerned about anti-Muslim sentiment, but there hasn’t been a similarly dramatic shift. High-quality polling of Muslim or Arab Americans is rare, in part because of small sample sizes.

Jewish community leaders and security experts stressed the need for security during periods of heightened visibility, such as the High Holidays, after multiple attacks against Jews in the U.S. this year. Those worries were thrown into even sharper relief last Thursday when an attacker drove a car into people outside a synagogue in England on the holiest day of the Jewish year, leading to two deaths.

In its most recent annual survey of Jewish Americans conducted in October and November 2024, the American Jewish Committee, a nonpartisan advocacy group that seeks to broadly represent Jews in the U.S. and abroad, found that about 7 in 10 respondents said they thought Jews in the United States were less secure than a year earlier.

“The number one reason given for why they feel less secure as Jews in America was the Israel-Hamas war,” said Holly Huffnagle, the Director of Antisemitism Policy at AJC.

A growing divide on the U.S.-Israel relationship

Over the last few decades, Americans of both parties have generally been more sympathetic toward the Israelis than the Palestinians.

FILE – A student wrapped in an Israeli flag listens to Pro-Palestinian protesters gathered on campus at the University of Texas at Austin, April 30, 2024, in Austin, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)

That’s changed since the war began. American sympathy for Israelis hit an all-time low in 2025, falling beneath 50% for the first time in almost 25 years of Gallup’s annual tracking of this measure, driven largely by drop-offs among Democrats and independents.

Sympathy for the Palestinians has also increased in Gallup’s polling, with about one-third of U.S. adults saying they sympathize more with the Palestinians this year.

In a recent survey, the Pew Research Center found that just 31% of Americans thought the U.S. was providing the “right amount” or “not enough” military assistance to Israel in its military conflict with Hamas, although large shares said there was “too much” support or expressed uncertainty.

This parallels deep dissatisfaction with the Israeli government’s handling of the war. About half of Americans say the military response from Israel in the Gaza Strip has “gone too far” in the most recent AP-NORC survey. Two years ago, shortly after Hamas launched its assault on Israel in which the group killed about 1,200 people and took 251 hostages, that figure was 40%.

In a Washington Post poll of Jewish Americans conducted in early September, about half also said they disapproved of the military action Israel has taken in Gaza, with an even higher share, 61%, saying they think Israel has committed war crimes against Palestinians in Gaza.

While partisanship has long been a dividing line on views of Israel, age is an increasingly noticeable cleavage. Pew found that about 4 in 10 adults under 30 thought the U.S. was providing “too much” aid to Israel, compared to about one-third of adults overall. And an AP-NORC poll from March found that younger Americans were less likely to say Israel and the U.S. were “close allies.” About one-quarter of adults under 30 said Israel was a close ally, compared to around half of adults over the age of 60.

Rising concern about treatment of American Jews

As attitudes toward Israel shift, new concerns about American Jews are emerging.

In 2018, 11 Jewish Americans were killed in Pittsburgh in the deadliest attack on a Jewish community in the U.S., prompting the AJC to relaunch its antisemitism survey to see whether the shooting had served as a “wake-up call” for American Jews, Huffnagle said. The share of Americans who say there is at least some discrimination against Jews has risen since 2021, according to Pew.

In subsequent surveys, older Americans of both parties were more likely than younger Americans to say there is at least “some” discrimination against Jews. And in 2024, Pew found the share of Americans who said there was “a lot” of discrimination against Jews had doubled compared since 2021.

Between 2021 and 2025, the share of adults who said they were “very” or “somewhat” satisfied with how Jewish people are treated fell from about half to 42%, according to Gallup. That represented the biggest decrease in total satisfaction among the eight racial or ethnic groups Gallup asked about.

Anti-Muslim language has also emerged in the New York City mayoral race, where Zohran Mamdani would become the city’s first Muslim mayor if elected. Concern about discrimination against Muslims was about as high as concerns about discrimination against Jews in the 2024 Pew survey. And similar shares of U.S. adults said they were “satisfied” with the treatment of Jewish and Arab people, according to Gallup.

Jewish Americans express new worries

These concerns are particularly acute for many Jewish Americans. The AJC found in its 2024 survey that about 9 in 10 Jews said antisemitism in the U.S. had increased in the previous five years and since the Oct. 7 attacks.

Dusk falls as children play at a temporary tent camp for displaced Palestinians in Deir al-Balah, in the central Gaza Strip, Monday, Oct. 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)

The survey also found that many Jewish Americans are modifying behavior. When asked whether they had avoided three specific actions out of fear of antisemitism — including actions that publicly identified them as a Jew in physical spaces or online — 56% of respondents said they had avoided at least one. Three years ago, that figure was 38%.

Fracture points are emerging within Jewish communities too. Protests on college campuses and relating to Israel have included Jewish Americans on both sides, and Jewish organizations have made statements in support of and in opposition to U.S. and Israeli handling of the war in Gaza. In recent months, however, Jewish-American organizations have been more vocal about the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

Even though the conflict is far away, the war has put some American Jews with connections to Israel in a challenging position.

One is Nathalie Shushan, 33, who lives in Manhattan and is of Egyptian-Jewish heritage. Since the war began, she’s felt afraid to talk to people who might not agree with her on Israel. “You want to be able to open a sincere dialogue in order to kind of bridge this gap,” she said. “It feels really hopeless and sometimes it feels really scary to like, try and engage in that way.”

US Treasury sanctions Mexican companies accused of aiding Sinaloa cartel’s fentanyl production

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MEXICO CITY (AP) — The U.S. Treasury Department on Monday sanctioned a network of companies and their affiliates that allegedly supplied precursor chemicals to make fentanyl to a faction of Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel.

A dozen Mexico-based companies and eight of the people managing them were accused of using their pharmaceutical, laboratory, chemical, cleaning and real estate businesses to purchase the chemicals and provide them to the Sinaloa cartel’s “Chapitos” faction, run by sons of the former Sinaloa leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán.

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One of the businesses, Sumilab, previously faced sanctions in 2023 by the Biden administration, but was able to maintain its “corporate structure” through a number of other front companies, Treasury officials wrote in a statement. The Monday measures freeze all assets in the U.S. and block U.S. transactions with the businesses and people sanctioned.

The cartel is among an expanding number of Latin American criminal groups that the Trump administration has designated as foreign terrorist organizations, part of an ongoing effort to more aggressively go after drug-trafficking groups.

“President Trump has made clear that stopping the deadly flow of drugs into our country is a top national security priority,” Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence John K. Hurley wrote in a statement. “The Treasury Department is committed to dismantling the complex financial networks that support these terrorist organizations.”

The Sinaloa cartel and other criminal organizations receiving the foreign terrorist organization designation in recent months differ from others seen as terrorist groups because they’re largely non-political and more focused on raking in profit.

Despite that, Trump said last week that his administration was in an “armed conflict” with drug cartels, following strikes on boats allegedly carrying drugs in the Caribbean that has set much of Latin America on edge.

ACLU says ICE is unlawfully punishing immigrants at a notorious Louisiana detention center

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By JIM MUSTIAN and SARA CLINE, Associated Press

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — The immigration detainees sent to a notorious Louisiana prison last month are being punished for crimes for which they have already served time, the American Civil Liberties Union said Monday in a lawsuit challenging the government’s decision to hold what it calls the “worst of the worst” there.

The lawsuit accuses President Donald Trump’s administration of selecting the former slave plantation known as Angola for its “uniquely horrifying history” and intentionally subjecting immigrant detainees to inhumane conditions — including foul water and lacking basic necessities — in violation of the Double Jeopardy clause, which protects people from being punished twice for the same crime.

The ACLU also alleges some immigrants detained at the newly opened facility should be released because the government failed to deport them within six months of a removal order. The lawsuit cites a 2001 Supreme Court ruling raised in several recent immigration cases, including that of the Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil, that says immigration detention should be “nonpunitive.”

“The anti-immigrant campaign under the guise of ‘Making America Safe Again’ does not remotely outweigh or justify indefinite detention in ‘America’s Bloodiest Prison’ without any of the rights afforded to criminal defendants,” ACLU attorneys argue in a petition reviewed by The Associated Press.

The AP sent requests for comment to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry.

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The lawsuit comes a month after state and federal authorities gathered at the sprawling Louisiana State Penitentiary to announce that the previously shuttered prison complex had been refurbished to house up to 400 immigrant detainees that officials said would include some of the most violent in ICE custody.

The complex had been described as “the dungeon” because it previously held inmates in solitary cells for more than 23 hours a day.

ICE repurposed the facility amid an ongoing legal battle over an immigration detention center in the Florida Everglades, and as Trump continues his large-scale attempt to remove millions of people suspected of entering the country illegally. The federal government has been racing to to expand its deportation infrastructure and, with state allies, has announced other new facilities, including in Indiana and Nebraska. ICE is seeking to detain 100,000 people under a $45 billion expansion Trump signed into law in July.

At Angola last month, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem told reporters the “legendary” maximum security prison, the largest in the nation, had been chosen to house a new ICE facility to encourage people in the U.S. illegally to self-deport. “This facility will hold the most dangerous of criminals,” she said.

Authorities said the immigration detainees would be isolated from Angola’s thousands of civil prisoners, many of whom are serving life sentences for violent offenses.

“I know you all in the media will attempt to have a field day with this facility, and you will try to find everything wrong with our operation in an effort to make those who broke the law in some of the most violent ways victims,” Landry, a Republican, said during a news conference last month.

“If you don’t think that they belong in somewhere like this, you’ve got a problem.”

The ACLU lawsuit says detainees at the facility already were “forced to go on hunger strike” to “demand basic necessities such as medical care, toilet paper, hygiene products and clean drinking water.” Detainees have described a long-neglected facility that was not yet prepared to house them, saying they are contending with mold, dust and ”black” water coming out of showers, court records show.

Federal and state officials have said those claims are part of a “false narrative” created by the media, and that the hunger strike only occurred after inaccurate reporting.

The lawsuit was filed in Baton Rouge federal court on behalf of Oscar Hernandez Amaya, a 34-year-old Honduran man who has been in ICE custody for two years. He was transferred to the facility last month from an ICE detention center in Pennsylvania.

Amaya fled Honduras two decades ago after refusing the violent MS-13 gang’s admonition “to torture and kill another human being,” the lawsuit alleges. The gang had recruited him at age 12, court documents say.

Amaya came to the United States, where he worked “without incident” until 2016. He was arrested that year and later convicted of attempted aggravated assault and sentenced to more than four years in prison. He was released on good-time credits after about two years and then transferred to ICE custody.

An immigration judge this year awarded Amaya “Convention Against Torture” protection from being returned to Honduras, the lawsuit says, but the U.S. government has failed to deport him to another country.

“The U.S. Supreme Court has been very clear that immigration detention cannot be used for punitive purposes,” Nora Ahmed, the ACLU of Louisiana’s legal director, told AP. “You cannot serve time for a crime in immigration detention.”

Mustian reported from New York

Woodbury Central Park to reopen this month in phases

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The updated and improved Central Park in Woodbury will have a phased reopening throughout October as construction continues beyond the initial estimated launch date of Oct. 1.

After more than a year of planning and construction, Central Park is close to being completed and ready for the public to enjoy once again.

“The whole intention was to get the space open in some capacity as quickly as possible,” said Woodbury Parks and Recreation Director Michelle Okada.

The project’s budget of $42.3 million was funded through grants, partner contributions, city funding and state bonds.

Lookout Ridge Indoor Playground, located on the lower level, opened to the public on Wednesday. Visitors can access it through both the East and West entrances, according to the city’s Facebook post. The indoor park will feature sustainable architecture, improved accessibility, an indoor playground, green space, comfortable seating and larger capacity event spaces.

“It’s a renovation of old spaces and addition of new spaces,” Okada said.

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Central Park, which first opened in 2002, required multiple updates after 23 years, Okada said. The indoor park, which connects the R.H. Stafford Library, YMCA and Stonecrest Senior Living, has become a staple in the city for people of all ages, she said. The improvements are meant to highlight features people previously loved about the facility, like the indoor green space, amphitheater and Lookout Ridge playground, while providing more points of accessibility and comfort.

One aspect of the update Okada and project partners expressed excitement over is increased seating. Because the space has access points to other organizations and resources, and stays open during the fall and winter months, people often enjoy sitting in the park, Okada said, but before the renovation, options were limited. As construction continues through October, the park will soon have multiple cushy seating options in the west and east entrances, as well as along the path of the indoor green space, she said.

“We really wanted the space to feel welcoming and inclusive,” Okada said. “Soft seating helps to create a welcoming environment.”

Some of the sustainable improvements include a solar rooftop, energy-efficient lighting and wood and metal structures. Visual updates will include a geometric light wall that guides visitors to the elevator, a public art display wall, nature-inspired mosaic murals, a painted mural at Lookout Ridge, a new water feature and more.

While portions of the park will continue to open in phases throughout October, the public is invited to celebrate the official grand reopening from noon to 4 p.m. on Nov. 2. Look for updates at woodburymn.gov.

Woodbury Central Park reopening

Location: 8595 Central Park Pl, Woodbury.

Lookout Ridge indoor playground: Opens Wednesday, Oct. 6. Hours: 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, Friday and Saturday; 1 to 5 p.m. Sunday. Cost: $8 per child. No cost for supervising adults.

More information: Visit woodburymn.gov/centralpark.