A New Hampshire legislative hearing drew national attention after a prominent Holocaust denier was invited to testify about the state's Holocaust education efforts. Watchdog groups and Jewish organizations warned that the event reflects a troubling trend: the growing normalization of Holocaust denial within American political discourse amid rising antisemitism in the United States.
The invited speaker, Germar Rudolf, has long rejected the historical record of the murder of six million Jews during the Second World War and has previously been convicted in Germany for inciting racial hatred. Critics expressed alarm that his testimony was allowed to remain in the official legislative record, arguing that Holocaust denial is often disguised as 'debate' or 'truth-seeking' while functioning as an antisemitic conspiracy theory.
The article also connects the hearing to a broader pattern in which public figures and media personalities have given space to voices that question or minimize the Holocaust. It warns that denial is no longer confined to fringe extremist circles but is increasingly appearing near mainstream political platforms.
The author argues that ignoring such rhetoric is no longer viable and calls the New Hampshire case a warning about how quickly extremist narratives can gain legitimacy through public institutions if left unchallenged.



