“Antisemites Will Be Expelled”: Bavaria Cracks Down on Anti-Israel Campus Protests

Type of Incident:
info
Date
January 19, 2026
City
Bavaria
Country
Germany

The German state of Bavaria has announced a series of new disciplinary measures targeting students who engage in antisemitic behavior, particularly in the context of rising hostility on university campuses. The move comes in response to increasing reports of anti-Jewish sentiment and actions at academic institutions.

According to Der Spiegel, students found guilty of “serious misconduct” such as persistent disruption at universities, including antisemitic actions, may now face expulsion from their university or even a ban on re-enrollment at any higher education institution in Bavaria. The state’s Science Minister, Markus Blume (CSU), stated that the amendment to the Higher Education Innovation Act will be approved by the cabinet within the next four weeks.

The revised law will include a new catalog of sanctions, ranging from formal warnings to the “ultimate sanction” of permanent exclusion from higher education in Bavaria. Blume emphasized that the measure aims to address the hostile climate that Jewish students are increasingly facing on campuses.

The initiative has received strong backing from Bavarian Prime Minister Markus Söder, known for his staunch support for Israel.

Currently, some universities in Bavaria already have internal regulations that allow expulsion as a last resort. However, policies vary by institution, with no unified standard across the state’s 43 universities and dozens of colleges, located in cities such as Munich, Nuremberg, Würzburg, and Augsburg.

The new disciplinary framework, modeled after school regulations, stipulates that antisemitic speech or actions can result in warnings, class transfers, or suspension. However, what constitutes a “persistent disruption” remains open to interpretation. For example, whether pro-Palestinian protest camps on campus would meet the threshold for expulsion will be left to the discretion of university leadership.

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