Good Thursday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we look at Newark Mayor Ras Baraka's rising poll numbers in the final days before New Jersey's Democratic gubernatorial primary, and look at how Jews in Australia and Canada are reacting to recent liberal party electoral victories in both countries. We also talk to experts about how Israel is viewing the White House's warming relations with Syria, and report on a bipartisan, bicameral call to the Trump administration to prioritize hostage-release efforts. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Sen. Lindsey Graham, Josh Kushner and Sarah Abramson. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇 |
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| - President Donald Trump arrived in the United Arab Emirates today as he continues on his multi-country Middle East trip.
- The Senate Armed Services Committee is convening a hearing this morning on foreign military sales.
- Also this morning, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is holding nomination hearings for Joel Rayburn to be assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern affairs and Chris Pratt to be assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs.
- Politico is hosting its Security Summit today in Washington. Speakers include: former National Security Advisors John Bolton and Jake Sullivan, the White House's Seb Gorka, Sens. Deb Fischer (R-NE), Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Eric Schmitt (R-MO) and Reps. Mike Lawler (R-NY), Michael McCaul (R-TX), Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL), Rick Crawford (R-AR), Jim Himes (D-CT), Anne Neuberger, former deputy national security advisor for cyber and emerging technologies, and the Foundation for Defense of Democracies' Craig Singleton.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S MELISSA WEISS |
On his first presidential visit to the Gulf nation eight years ago, Trump called Qatar "a funder of terrorism at a very high level." Last night in Doha, the president praised Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani as an "outstanding man." It's a remarkable turnaround that underscores Doha's efforts to use its financial largesse to build goodwill and position itself as a global player. Doha, which a decade ago was ostracized in the region and on the global stage but has since regained its standing, has in recent years served as an intermediary between the West and malign actors (some of which, like Hamas, it financially supports). Earlier this week, al-Thani acknowledged Qatar's "long outreach" that has included diplomatic efforts in the Russia-Ukraine war, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Afghanistan. And at a state dinner given in Trump's honor last night in Doha, the president asked al-Thani to "help me with the Iran situation." (American negotiators reportedly presented Iran with a nuclear agreement proposal during the latest round of talks over the weekend.) As Trump left Qatar today, the White House announced that it had secured deals with the country worth $243.5 billion. While the current and previous administrations have welcomed Qatar's efforts (specifically with assistance in negotiations over the Israel-Hamas war), Capitol Hill is taking a more measured — and cautious — approach to the Gulf nation, potentially setting up clashes with the White House. Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA), who earlier this week had hedged when asked about Qatar's intention to gift a luxury jet to Trump, took a harder line against Doha days later, saying he trusts Qatar "like I trust a rest stop bathroom." Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) said on Tuesday that the potential gift "will attract very serious questions." Qatar has long flexed its economic power and vast wealth to spread controlled messaging (as it does with its Al Jazeera network and affiliated channels), exert influence abroad (as it does with its deep-pocketed funding of American universities), avoid punishment for vast human rights abuses (as it did with the construction of the World Cup facilities) and mend frayed relations (as it did with its reentry into the Gulf Cooperation Council). Yesterday, The Free Press' Jay Solomon and Frannie Block published an 8,600-word piece examining Qatar's efforts to gain influence across American society. Doha's yearslong efforts have even won over some Republican legislators. Following the announcement yesterday that Qatar had inked an agreement to purchase up to 210 Boeing 787s and 777X aircraft — the largest purchase in the aviation manufacturer's history — Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) praised the deal, calling it a "game changer" and noting Boeing's factory in Charleston. "Qatar Airways' purchase will ensure the Charleston plant has work for many years to come … I appreciate our allies in Qatar for making this investment in Boeing aircraft and I appreciate everything the Trump Administration has done to make this possible," Graham posted on X. But more telling of Qatar's efforts to boost its image is Sen. Roger Marshall's (R-KS) 180 on Doha. Six years ago, Marshall blasted Qatar's "well-documented support for terrorism and extremist groups [that] have fueled violence, civil war and bloodshed." But in a Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing on campus antisemitism in March, Marshall denied that documented antisemitic incidents had occurred on campuses that have received Qatari funding and called the Gulf nation "a great ally to America." What happened in the intervening years? In 2023, Marshall visited Qatar, where he met with the emir. The following year, the senator met with Qatar's prime minister in Washington, leading a meeting with a group of Republican senators. In addition, disclosures through the Foreign Agents Registration Act first obtained by the Washington Examiner indicate repeated outreach from lobbyists for Doha to Marshall's longtime chief of staff, including an invitation to a March 2022 trip to Qatar. Successive administrations and Capitol Hill have largely looked away from Qatar's vast influence network. With the world focused on crises around the world, as well as more pressing concerns over Russia, China and Iran, it has been easy for concerns about Qatari influence to fall by the wayside. Doha's evolution from regional pariah to global power broker reveals an ugly truth about politics: that enough patience and resources can restore the standing of dangerous entities. In the coming weeks and months, the White House and Capitol Hill may be forced to reckon with the true price of that partnership. |
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Newark Mayor Ras Baraka's late surge in N.J. gubernatorial primary alarms Jewish leaders |
KENA BETANCUR/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES |
With less than a month until New Jersey's June 10 gubernatorial primary, Jewish community leaders are now confronting the unexpected rise of a far-left Democrat whose campaign is surging even as he has faced scrutiny over his record of commentary on key issues including Israel and antisemitism. Ras Baraka, the longtime mayor of Newark, drew national headlines last week after he was arrested by federal agents on trespassing charges at an immigration detention facility where he had been protesting, in a made-for-TV moment caught on video. The high-profile confrontation has helped to propel Baraka, an outspoken progressive who until recently had been seen as a long shot, to the top of a crowded primary field. A new internal poll commissioned by his campaign showed the Newark mayor closing in on Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ), the establishment favorite, who led by just four points and claimed only 21% of the vote, Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel reports. Community concerns: That Baraka is positioned to pull off a potential upset in the Democratic primary, where a relatively small plurality of the vote could secure his nomination, has raised alarms among some Jewish leaders in the state who have voiced concerns about the mayor's past praise of Louis Farrakhan, the virulently antisemitic Nation of Islam leader, and his condemnation of Israel's war in Gaza, among other issues. But as the primary draws closer, Jewish leaders acknowledge that they have not yet developed a playbook to counter Baraka's ascendance, pointing to a broader pattern of organizational confusion in a state home to a sizable, diverse and politically active Jewish community. "I find the organizing very lacking right now," one Jewish activist in New Jersey told JI on Wednesday, even as she described "grave concerns" among Jewish community members who have found Baraka's rhetoric "over the top." Read the full story here. Bonus: Former Anti-Defamation League National Director Abe Foxman endorsed Rep. Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) in the Democratic primary. |
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Trump's decision to lift Syria sanctions sparks concern in Israel |
BANDAR AL-JALOUD/SAUDI ROYAL COURT/HANDOUT/ANADOLU VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Lifting all U.S. sanctions on Syria risks bolstering a jihadist regime, Israeli analysts warned after President Donald Trump's announcement in Saudi Arabia on Tuesday. After announcing the removal of sanctions, Trump met the following day in the capital city of Riyadh, with Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa, the former head of Al-Qaida in Syria whose nom de guerre was Ahmed al-Jolani. Trump urged al-Sharaa to join the Abraham Accords, and in doing so, recognize and normalize relations with Israel, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports. Israel on the outside: Carmit Valensi and Amal Hayek, researchers at INSS, wrote in a paper provided to JI before publication that "from the Israeli angle, the developments raise many concerns. The Syrian case is an additional expression of Trump's independent moves that do not necessarily take Israeli interests into consideration." In addition, Trump's actions vis-a-vis Syria "show the increased weight given to Turkey and Syria in designing the regional order," they wrote. A different view: But Maj.-Gen (res). Amos Yadlin, the former IDF military intelligence chief, argued against the Israeli establishment view, which, he told JI's Gabby Deutch, "decided not to give [al-Sharaa] a chance." Yadlin supported Israel's destruction of the Syrian military, but not its continued presence and strikes on its neighbor to the northeast. "The fact that [former Syrian President Bashar] Assad is gone is good for Israel, and now we have a new person that we don't really know whether he is an Al-Qaida terrorist or if he is a new leader for Syria that will take it to a different relationship with its neighbors and a different Syria," Yadlin said. Read the full story here. |
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Jews in Canada and Australia warily eye the future after liberal party electoral victories |
ASANKA RATNAYAKE/GETTY IMAGES |
In Australia, the much-publicized video of anti-Israel protesters shouting "where's the Jew?" soon after Oct. 7 was not an anomaly but rather the beginning of a rapid increase in antisemitism in this country whose small but proud Jewish community had previously taken pride in Australia's welcoming, pluralistic nature. Now, Australian Jews are making sense of a recent election in which the center-left Labor Party that has governed throughout the aftermath of Oct. 7 and the war in Gaza was reelected, giving Prime Minister Anthony Albanese — whose ties to the Jewish community have come under strain — another term in office. Meanwhile in Canada, which also has a sizable Jewish vote and a record of growing antisemitism, another left-learning party recently notched an even more unexpected victory. For Jewish community leaders in both countries, the recent elections present an opportunity to rebuild ties that have frayed. But it won't be easy, with wounds still raw and antisemitism still elevated, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. Looking ahead: "Some mistakes were made, and there were some oversights made, but we certainly think that there's a willingness to make some improvements and to do what they can to improve the lives of Jewish people here in Australia," said Naomi Levin, CEO of the Jewish Community Council of Victoria, which includes Melbourne, of the Australian government. "We didn't have the leadership that we needed to crack down on it. Now it's very hard to go back. Once that genie is out of the bottle, it's very hard to put it back in." Read the full story here. | |
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Most congressional Republicans insist on no enrichment for Iran |
ATTA KENARE/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Nearly all Senate Republicans sent a letter to President Donald Trump on Wednesday urging him only to agree to a nuclear deal with Iran that requires the full dismantlement of Tehran's nuclear program. Eighty percent of House Republicans — 177 lawmakers — signed onto a nearly identical letter, Jewish Insider's Emily Jacobs and Marc Rod report. Red lines: The Senate letter, led by Sens. Pete Ricketts (R-NE) and Ted Cruz (R-TX) and co-signed by every Republican senator except Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), calls on the Trump administration to follow through on their "explicit warnings" that Tehran "must permanently give up any capacity for enrichment." The House version of the letter was led by Rep. August Pfluger (R-TX), the chairman of the Republican Study Committee, the largest conservative caucus in the House. The letters, drafts of which were first reported by JI last week, serve as a clear message to the president from congressional Republicans of their expectations that a new nuclear deal with Iran must cut off its nuclear enrichment capabilities permanently, amid inconsistent public messaging from the administration on the subject. The letters frame the appeal as a message of support for Trump's position on the issue. Read the full story here. |
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Bipartisan, bicameral resolutions urge White House to prioritize hostage release |
NATHAN HOWARD/GETTY IMAGES |
New resolutions introduced Wednesday in the Senate by Sens. Jacky Rosen (D-NV) and Todd Young (R-IN) and in the House by Reps. Haley Stevens (D-MI) and French Hill (R-AR) condemn Hamas' hostage-taking and other malign activities and urge the administration to focus on freeing the 58 remaining hostages being held in Gaza, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Keeping focus: The introduction of the resolutions coincides with President Donald Trump's visit to the Middle East and comes days after Hamas released Israeli American hostage Edan Alexander following direct talks with the United States, in which Israel was not involved. The resolution "applauds the Administration for securing the release of Edan Alexander and calls on the White House to continue taking all possible steps to secure the release of all the hostages held captive by Hamas." Read the full story here. | |
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Graham highlights concerns about Houthi strikes on Israel amid U.S. ceasefire |
ANNA MONEYMAKER/GETTY IMAGES |
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) expressed concern on Wednesday about continued Houthi attacks on Israel despite the U.S. ceasefire deal with the group, suggesting that President Donald Trump's desire to quickly find resolutions to conflicts may not be conducive to U.S. interests, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. It's the second time in two days the close Trump ally has appeared to put distance between himself and the president on foreign policy issues. What he said: "I am very sad and disappointed to hear that after all the efforts to deal with the Houthis, they are still shooting ballistic missiles at our friends in Israel," Graham said in a post on X. "I appreciate President Trump trying to pursue peace on multiple fronts, however we must hold bad actors accountable when they defy these efforts." He said he expects Israel may take action against Iran directly in response to the strikes. Read the full story here. | |
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From Tee to Negotiating Table: In The Atlantic, Isaac Stanley-Becker spotlights Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff – of whose existence Stanley-Becker said "few people outside New York real-estate circles knew" prior to this year — as the White House official leads American teams navigating a series of international conflicts and crises. "[Secretary of State Marco] Rubio came into his role with one enormous disadvantage: He wasn't a friend of Trump's. Witkoff very much is. The two men have known each for 40 years. He is a regular at the president's many golf clubs. Witkoff followed Trump into real-estate investing, a pursuit that made them both billionaires. He has been by Trump's side through bankruptcy, two divorces, two impeachments, two assassination attempts, and two inaugurations. Now Trump has asked his friend to solve many of the world's most dangerous problems, problems that have defeated generations of American presidents and diplomats." [TheAtlantic] The Trump Doctrine: The Free Press' Eli Lake considers how President Donald Trump's approach to global politics differs from traditional thinking. "As Trump sees it, how a government is organized internally — whether it's a liberal democratic republic or a repressive police state — is irrelevant to America's national interests. What matters is how that state behaves. If Iran sponsors terrorism and pursues a nuclear weapon, then Trump will use at least economic coercion to punish Iran's adventurism. So long as Saudi Arabia and its ruling family are willing to invest in America's economy and act as a stabilizing force in the region, then who cares if it is an undemocratic monarchy accused of murdering its critics abroad? … Trump is partially correct to survey the regime change wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and ask why these countries' capitals pale in comparison to Abu Dhabi and Riyadh. But he's wrong to suggest that Iraqis or Afghans were better off living under the tyrannies the U.S. systems replaced. In the case of Afghanistan, the country is back to living under the Taliban and the results are predictably horrendous." [FreePress] The Road Less Traveled: The Wall Street Journal's Ben Cohen profiles AirBnb founder Brian Chesky as the company expands beyond stays and experiences to offer a range of services. "The son of two social workers, Chesky grew up in Niskayuna, New York, tinkering with his sneakers and hockey equipment. As he got older, he asked Santa for poorly designed toys so he could take a crack at improving them. By the time he was 11, he was asking neighbors if he could redesign their backyard decks. ('No one commissioned me,' he says.) As a teenager, he convinced his father to buy Disney stock so he could get his hands on the company's annual reports to study architectural renderings of theme parks. After graduating from the Rhode Island School of Design, he took a job in Los Angeles as an industrial designer. Inspired by Walt Disney taking a chance and moving to Hollywood nearly a century earlier, Chesky moved to San Francisco and lived with his RISD buddy Joe Gebbia. … With a design conference coming to town, they realized other broke designers would need a place to crash, so they bought three air beds and welcomed their first guests. Chesky still has the receipt — a memento of the best $55 he ever spent. Before long, Chesky, Gebbia and Nathan Blecharczyk started a company they called AirBed & Breakfast. [WSJ] |
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President Donald Trump, speaking in Doha, Qatar, suggested turning the Gaza Strip into a "freedom zone," saying, "I'd be proud to have the United States have it, take it, make it a freedom zone"... The National Security Council is expected to be overhauled in the coming days, including staff reductions and a restructuring of decision-making processes, amid a broader weakening of the department under the Trump administration… Several top Biden and Obama administration foreign policy advisors, including suspended Iran envoy Rob Malley, backhandedly praised Trump's willingness to bypass Israel in his Middle East diplomacy, in interviews with Axios; "It's hard not to be simultaneously terrified at the thought of the damage he can cause with such power, and awed by his willingness to brazenly shatter so many harmful taboos," Malley said… Former Obama Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes also reacted to Trump's Middle East policy in the Axios story: "I don't like Trump's motivations for lots of things he does but one thing you will say is he's not tied to this constant fear of some bad faith right-wing attacks or stupid Blob-type, 'we don't do this, we must leverage the sanctions for blah blah blah.' No! Sometimes you just have to try something different"... The State Department announced sanctions on individuals and entities in China and Hong Kong tied to Iran's ballistic-missile program… Axios looks at Sen. Tom Cotton's (R-AR) efforts to exert public pressure on the White House to reject an Iranian nuclear deal that allows Tehran to continue enriching uranium… Speaking at a House Homeland Security Committee hearing, Rep. Tim Kennedy (D-NY) criticized the administration's budget proposal to strip funding from programs designed to combat domestic violent extremism and accused the administration of ignoring the issue and "making excuses for domestic terrorists." He invoked the white supremacist Buffalo supermarket shooting that took place three years ago yesterday… The House of Representatives voted 421-1 on a resolution in favor of honoring Jewish American Heritage Month and calling on elected leaders to combat antisemitism, with only Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) voting against it… Ronald Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress and a prolific Jewish philanthropist and GOP donor, appeared among other guests at the Lusail Palace in Doha, Qatar, on Wednesday to greet Trump and Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Jewish Insider's Danielle Cohen reports… A former Michigan National Guardsman accused of plotting to carry out a mass-shooting attack on a Detroit-area Army base was arrested by federal agents… One of the first white South Africans to enter the U.S. through a refugee program was found to have made antisemitic posts on social media; Charl Kleinhaus said one of the posts, calling Jews "untrustworthy" and "a dangerous group," was a mistake… Josh Kushner's Thrive Capital told investors it made a $522 million profit from its investment in Carvana… Harvard President Alan Garber is taking a voluntary 25% pay cut for the upcoming fiscal year, as the school faces fiscal challenges in the wake of the Trump administration's federal funding cuts to Harvard… The Georgetown University researcher arrested by immigration authorities in March and held in a detention center was released following a judge's order… A spokesperson for NYU issued an apology following an incident at the Gallatin School's commencement ceremony earlier this week in which a student speaker condemned "the genocide and atrocities in Gaza"... The Department of Health and Human Services opened an investigation into Northwestern University's handling of campus antisemitism; the Evanston, Ill., school was already facing a Department of Education investigation as well as a congressional inquiry on the issue… The California Department of Education said that a Northern California school district mishandled a complaint that had alleged that a teacher had suggested there were "too many Jews in the district"... A pregnant Israeli woman en route to a hospital to give birth was shot and killed in a terror attack in the West Bank on Wednesday night; the baby is in serious condition after doctors performed a cesarean section… The newly created Gaza Aid Foundation said that Israel will resume aid to the enclave after a two-month freeze… The Atlantic spotlights the challenges facing Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa five months after he led the overthrow of the Assad regime and assumed power in the war-torn country... Sarah Abramson was named the next CEO of OneTable, succeeding Aliza Kline; Abramson will assume the position in August, eJewishPhilanthropy's Judah Ari Gross reports… Physicist Richard Garwin, who played a key role in the creation of the hydrogen bomb, died at 97… Paul Strassmann, who as a teenager was a Resistance fighter in Nazi Europe and would go on to become an IT whiz in the corporate world, died at 96… |
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Israeli Minister of Foreign Affairs Gideon Sa'ar visited Israel's pavilion at the World Expo in Osaka, Japan, on Thursday. |
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QUINN HARRIS/GETTY IMAGES |
Owner/President of the NFL's Minnesota Vikings, he is the chairman of the Board of Governors of The Jewish Agency for Israel, Mark Wilf turns 63... Principal of Queens-based Muss Development, Joshua Lawrence Muss turns 84... Chairman emeritus of The Raoul Wallenberg Committee of the United States, Rachel Oestreicher Bernheim turns 82... Chairman of the Religious Zionists of America, he was born in a DP camp as a child of Holocaust survivors, Martin Oliner turns 78... Retired major general in the IDF, he served as Israel's national security advisor and is now a senior fellow at the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic Studies, Yaakov Amidror turns 77... Israeli diplomat who served as Israel's ambassador to the Holy See, Mordechay Lewy turns 77... CEO of Emigrant Bank, real estate developer, financier and philanthropist, Howard Philip Milstein turns 74... Professor of pathology and genetics at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, he is the author of Legacy: A Genetic History of the Jewish People, Harry Ostrer turns 74... Professor of Jewish studies at Dartmouth College, she is the daughter of Abraham Joshua Heschel, Susannah Heschel turns 69... Owner of Midnight Music Management and one of the founders of The Happy Minyan in Los Angeles, Stuart Wax... Associate editor and columnist at the Washington Post until two months ago, Ruth Allyn Marcus turns 67... Five-time Emmy Award-winning journalist, producer, filmmaker and Latin media marketing entrepreneur, Giselle Fernandez turns 64... First lady of Israel, Michal Herzog turns 64... Founding rabbi of Kehilat Rayim Ahuvim in NYC and a member of the Talmud faculty at Yeshivat Maharat, Adam Mintz turns 64... Former member of the Nevada Assembly, she served as secretary of the National Association of Jewish Legislators, Ellen Barre Spiegel turns 63... Director, screenwriter and former film critic, Rod Lurie turns 63... Actor and filmmaker known for his collaborations with George Clooney, Grant Heslov turns 62... Vice chancellor of Brown University, she is the founder of Reeves Advisory, Pamela Ress Reeves... Actor and comedian, David Krumholtz turns 47... Executive director in the Office of Crime Victim Services at the Wisconsin Department of Justice, Shira Rosenthal Phelps... Noam Finger turns 47... Director of the center for civics, education and opportunity at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation & Institute, Daniel M. Rothschild... Actress best known for her role as Tony Soprano's daughter, Meadow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler turns 44... Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and author, Eli Eric Saslow turns 43... Senior editor at Vogue, Chloe F. Schama... Director of career services at Georgetown's McDonough School of Business, Lisa Dubler... Rochelle Wilner... Ofir Richman... |
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