The organization has faced allegations of anti-Semitism from some critics, which it denies, stating that its activism targets Israeli government policy rather than Jewish people. In 2017 Alex Massie of the
Sunday Times wrote that the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign was ‘a sewer’ due to its antisemitism. Tory MSP Jackson Carlaw put forward motion a motion condemning "the campaign by the Scottish Palestine Solidarity Campaign (SPSC) against the Stills Gallery in Edinburgh for accepting a donation from the Israeli embassy", claiming SPSC had "shown itself to be a thoroughly discredited organisation driven more by a hatred of Israel than a desire to support Palestinians". In 2017, Member of Parliament
John Mann called for action against "racists" following a report by pro-Israel blogger David Collier which cited links between the SPSC and anti-semitism within Scotland, and further that there was a link between anti-Israel attitudes and anti-semitism. In 2017, a Jewish businessman claimed he was hounded by campaigners associated with the group, a claim the organization disputes. In 2020, Glasgow lawyer Matthew Berlow was fined by the Law Society of Scotland after staging a fake anti-Semitic incident at his home and using a false social media account that falsely implicated the SPSC. == References ==