Good Wednesday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we cover yesterday's antisemitism hearing on Capitol Hill with the leaders of Georgetown University, the City University of New York and the University of California, Berkeley, as well as the suspension of Georgetown professor Jonathan Brown following his call for Iran to strike the U.S. We also report on steps taken by Columbia University to try to reach a deal with the Trump administration on its handling of antisemitism and report from the Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit in Pittsburgh. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Ambassador Mike Huckabee, Albert Bourla and Richard Attias. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.π |
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- President Donald Trump is slated to host Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani tonight at the White House. More below.
- At the Aspen Security Forum this afternoon, Amos Yadlin, the former head of the IDF's Intelligence Directorate; Mike Herzog, the former Israeli ambassador to the U.S.; Brett McGurk, the former National Security Council coordinator for the Middle East and North Africa; and Dan Senor, author and "Call Me Back" podcast host, are set to take the stage for a conversation about Israel's future.
- This morning in Washington, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee is slated to hold a business meeting followed by a full committee hearing on State Department reform.
- This afternoon, the House Foreign Affairs Committee's Middle East and North Africa subcommittee is holding its own hearing on State Department management.
- Also today, Rep. Mark Harris (R-NC) is holding a press conference with other members of Congress calling for the National Education Association's congressional charter to be revoked following the organization's adoption of a measure effectively banning cooperation with the Anti-Defamation League.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S MELISSA WEISS |
Ceasefire and hostage-release talks have been ongoing in Doha, Qatar, for the last week. But one of the most consequential meetings in the negotiations could be happening tonight in Washington, when President Donald Trump hosts Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani for dinner at the White House. This continues a new tradition for Trump of hosting prominent Gulf royals who aren't the heads of state of their respective countries for dinner at the White House. In March, Trump hosted a dinner in the White House's State Dining Room for Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed Al Nahyan, the United Arab Emirates' national security advisor and chairman of several sovereign wealth funds. Qatari officials have been in the U.S. all week. Qatari Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani was rumored to have met with Trump on the sidelines of the FIFA finals in New Jersey on Sunday, after being spotted in New York over the weekend. White House Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff, whose trip to Doha last week was postponed over stalled talks, told reporters over the weekend that he planned to meet with Qatari negotiators on the sidelines of the match. And Trump shared a suite with senior Qatari sports officials at the match, including Nasser bin Ghanim Al-Khelaifi, the president of the Paris Saint-Germain team who played in New Jersey on Sunday and chairman of beIN Sports, previously known as Al Jazeera Sport. (In a weekend interview at the FIFA match, Trump even noted Qatar's "big presence.") Qatar also loomed large in Washington this week, where legislators on the House Education and the Workforce Committee pressed university leaders from Georgetown, CUNY and the University of California, Berkeley about their foreign funding sources during a hearing about antisemitism in higher education. (More below on the hearing.) Former Rep. Jim Moran (D-VA), one of Qatar's top lobbyists in Washington, was seen sitting right behind Georgetown University interim President Robert Groves as Groves testified on Tuesday. The school has received over $1 billion from Qatar, and has a campus in Doha. Qatar's be-everywhere, invest-in-everything strategy has allowed Doha to gain footholds across the global economy and in diplomatic circles. And since the start of the war, it has sought to highlight its role as a facilitator of ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas, the latter of which Doha supports financially and diplomatically. Doha has the power to push Hamas to accept a ceasefire. Whether tonight's dinner will exact a change in Qatar's approach to Hamas remains to be seen. The sit-down between Trump and the Qatari prime minister could change the tide in the 21-month war, or it could serve as yet another missed opportunity in a war full of stalemates and diplomatic posturing — with fresh casualties mounting on both sides and 50 hostages still languishing in captivity. Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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| Berkeley chancellor calls Hamas-endorsing professor a 'fine scholar' at antisemitism hearing |
When the leaders of Georgetown University, the City University of New York and the University of California, Berkeley sat down on Tuesday morning to testify at a congressional hearing about antisemitism, they clearly came prepared, having learned the lessons of the now-infamous December 2023 hearing with the presidents of Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania and MIT, each of whom refused to outright say that calls for genocide violated their schools' codes of conduct. Georgetown interim President Robert Groves, CUNY Chancellor Felix Matos Rodriguez and UC Berkeley Chancellor Rich Lyons were all quick to denounce antisemitism and even anti-Zionism at Tuesday's House Education and Workforce Committee hearing examining the role of faculty, funding and ideology in campus antisemitism. But while the university administrators readily criticized antisemitism broadly, they struggled to apply that commitment directly to their field of academia, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. Mind the gap: Lyons in particular offered a revealing look at the gulf between a university's stated values and its difficulty in carrying them out. He was asked to account for the promotion of Ussama Makdisi, a Berkeley history professor who described the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attacks as "resistance" and later wrote on X that he "could have been one of those who broke the siege on October 7." Why, Lyons was asked by Reps. Randy Fine (R-FL) and Lisa McClain (R-MI), did Berkeley announce last September that Makdisi had been named the university's inaugural chair of Palestinian and Arab studies? Lyons first defended Makdisi: "Ussama Makdisi, Professor Makdisi, is a fine scholar. He was awarded that position from his colleagues based on academic standards," Lyons said. Later, when McClain followed Fine's line of questioning, Lyons went to great lengths to avoid criticizing Makdisi. Read the full story here. Given the boot: Jonathan Brown, a tenured Georgetown University professor who came under fire last month for a social media post in which he called for Iran to conduct a "symbolic strike" on a U.S. military base, has been placed on leave and removed as chair of the school's Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies, Georgetown's Groves said Tuesday at the congressional hearing. |
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Columbia takes steps to reach Title VI deal with federal government |
CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Columbia University announced on Tuesday it would implement several measures to confront antisemitism in an effort to reach a deal with the Trump administration to restore the $400 million in federal funding that was cut by the government in March due to the university's record dealing with the issue, Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen reports. The measures: The steps include the university further incorporating the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's working definition of antisemitism by requiring its Office of Institutional Equity to embrace the definition; appointing a Title VI coordinator to review alleged violations of the Civil Rights Act; requiring antisemitism training for all students, faculty and staff; and refusing to recognize or meet with "Columbia University Apartheid Divest," a coalition of over 80 university student groups that Instagram banned for promoting violence. Read the full story here. |
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Waltz commits to combating 'pervasive antisemitism' at U.N. during nomination hearing |
MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO/GETTY IMAGES |
Former White House National Security Advisor Mike Waltz laid out an aggressive approach to countering anti-Israel sentiment at the United Nations during his Senate confirmation hearing on Tuesday to be U.S. ambassador to the global body, accusing the organization in his opening statement of "pervasive antisemitism," Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel reports. Setting goals: Waltz, a staunch supporter of Israel and an outspoken critic of Iran who was nominated for the U.N. post in May after being removed from his position as national security advisor, said he would seek to block "anti-Israel resolutions" in the General Assembly and would push for the dismantlement of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency over some of its employees' involvement in the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks. Read the full story here. |
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McCormick, Shapiro project unity at innovation summit aimed at spurring PA investment |
JEFF SWENSEN/GETTY IMAGES |
Pennsylvania's top lawmakers put up a united front on Tuesday to emphasize to the hundreds of tech and energy investors at Sen. Dave McCormick's (R-PA) inaugural innovation summit the benefits of working with states that embrace bipartisanship and the national security imperatives of investing domestically, Jewish Insider's Emily Jacobs reports from Pittsburgh. The Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit brought top tech and energy executives to Carnegie Mellon University's campus, home to one of the world's most advanced AI programs. Tuesday's gathering also included the state's two leading Democrats, Gov. Josh Shapiro and Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA), and President Donald Trump, all of whom praised the conference as a strategic way to promote U.S. investment to the scores of foreign and American leaders in attendance. Better together: Amazon Web Services' $20 billion investment last month in three computing and AI campuses in the Keystone State was "an indicator of all that we can be when we harness the new things that we have going for us, and when we have government and the private sector working together, not at odds, and when we pull in our educational institutions … in a way that really helps move Pennsylvania forward," Shapiro said during a panel discussion with McCormick and AWS CEO Matt Garman. Read the full story here. |
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Huckabee calls on Israel to 'aggressively investigate' killing of American citizen in West Bank |
ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY IMAGES |
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee on Tuesday called on Israel to "aggressively investigate" the death of Saif Musallet, a Palestinian-American man from Florida who was killed by Israeli settlers in the West Bank last Friday. In a statement posted to X, Huckabee called the incident a "criminal and terrorist act" and said "there must be accountability." Musallet, 20, was attacked by Israeli settlers while visiting his family in Sinjil, a village north of Ramallah. The Palestinian Authority Ministry of Health reported a second man was also shot and killed during the incident, Jewish Insider's Danielle Cohen-Kanik reports. Weighing in: Democratic lawmakers in Washington also weighed in on the attack. Rep. Brad Schneider (D-IL), a pro-Israel stalwart, said on Tuesday that he was "appalled and heartbroken" by the news, adding he had "repeatedly called on the Israeli government to address the growing number of violent attacks by Israeli settlers in the West Bank." House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) called the "brutal killing" of Musallet "shocking and appalling" and said the Israeli government "must thoroughly investigate this killing and hold any and all settlers responsible." Read the full story here. |
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Bipartisan bill aims to expand U.S.-Israel health collaboration |
ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY IMAGES/TOM WILLIAMS/CQ-ROLL CALL, INC VIA GETTY IMAGES |
A new bipartisan House bill set to be introduced on Wednesday aims to expand U.S.-Israeli research and development cooperative programs in the medical field. The BIRD Health Act, led by Reps. Randy Weber (R-TX) and Chris Pappas (D-NH), builds on the long-running Binational Industrial Research and Development Foundation program, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Moving forward: Around a third of BIRD projects in the past decade have been related to the health-care sector, and the U.S. and Israel have pursued growing cooperation in the field in recent years. The bill would further formalize those efforts by establishing a new $10 million annual funding stream and joint management structure between the Department of Health and Human Services and the Israeli Ministry of Health specifically focused on supporting such projects. It would support research and development between institutions and companies in both countries, including startups, as well as health systems, telemedicine, disease prevention efforts and biological product manufacturing. Read the full story here. |
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NEA's Lesson Plan: In The Wall Street Journal, Anti-Defamation League CEO Jonathan Greenblatt responds to the National Education Association's recent adoption of a measure targeting the ADL. "This wasn't about the ADL. It was a clear and unambiguous statement to Jewish educators, parents and children: You don't count. And it perversely takes this stance at a time when anti-Jewish hate is skyrocketing. … Unfortunately, the NEA vote is symptomatic of a larger problem of intensifying antisemitism in our K-12 schools. Specifically, antisemitism cloaked in the rhetoric of anti-Zionism. A generation of teachers has been educated on college campuses where this poison has festered and spread. It has been normalized. Now its purveyors want to bring this bigotry into your children's classrooms." [WSJ] Pressing Putin: The Washington Post's David Ignatius looks at President Donald Trump's new approach to Russia, following Trump's support for sending offensive weapons to Ukraine. "Trump decided to escalate for three reasons, according to a source familiar with administration discussions. First, he believed that Putin was disrespecting him, feigning a readiness to make peace but ignoring the U.S. president's call for a ceasefire. Second, he saw the efficacy of U.S. military power in the use of B-2 bombers and Tomahawk missiles against Iran. And third, he thought Putin would only negotiate if threatened with greater force. As the Russians like to say, Trump decided to 'escalate to de-escalate.' Trump has made a sound choice in recognizing that Putin won't make concessions without more pressure. But the president has also embarked on an escalatory course whose risks are unknowable." [WashPost] Mamdani's Gift … to the GOP: The New York Times' Bret Stephens posits that a victory in November by New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani would be a positive outcome for Republicans nationwide who are likely — and in some cases, have already begun — to push Mamdani as the future of the Democratic Party. "Among the reasons the Democratic Party's brand has become toxic in recent years is progressive misgovernance in places like Los Angeles; San Francisco; Oakland, Calif.; Portland, Ore.; Seattle; and Chicago. If Mamdani governs on the promises on which he's campaigned, he'll bring the same toxicity to America's biggest city. … A Mamdani mayoralty would be the political gift that keeps on giving. The state of the city would become a reflection of the Democratic Party writ large. Every Mamdani utterance would become a test for every Democratic politician, starting with Senator Chuck Schumer on Israel." [NYTimes] |
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The FBI released new images of three Iranian intelligence agents believed to be involved in the kidnapping and disappearance of retired special agent Bob Levinson, who was last seen on Iran's Kish Island in 2007; Levinson is believed to have died in Iranian custody sometime prior to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic… Adelita Grijalva was declared the winner of the Democratic primary special election in Arizona's 7th Congressional District to succeed her father, Rep. RaΓΊl Grijalva, who died earlier this year; the special election in the deep-blue district will take place in September… Former Washington, D.C., Councilmember Trayon White, who was expelled last year over an ongoing bribery case, was reelected to his seat in a special election on Tuesday; White had previously promoted antisemitic conspiracy theories while in office… New York City Democratic mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani told business leaders on Tuesday that he would "discourage" the use of the "globalize the intifada" slogan and not use the phrase himself, but said the term was used by many to show support for Palestinians; among the attendees in the 90-minute meeting was Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, who, according to The New York Times, "pushed Mr. Mamdani about the meaning of genocide and defended Israel's war in Gaza"... Former Future Investment Initiative Institute CEO Richard Attias is rejoining the Saudi Arabian conference network as interim CEO, replacing Penny Richards, who is departing after six months in the position… The United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism ended its contract last month with an interfaith advisor who had been working with the group for several years, in a potential indication that it is moving away from previous plans to allow rabbis within the movement to officiate interfaith weddings, eJewishPhilanthropy's Jay Deitcher reports… The Washington Post reports on the recent reunion between a 97-year-old Holocaust survivor and one of the American soldiers involved in the liberation of the Buchenwald concentration camp; the reunion was facilitated by the USC Shoah Foundation… British police cautioned that Russia, China and Iran were behind an increasing number of sabotage, espionage and kidnapping plots in the U.K…. France, Germany and the U.K. will bring back sanctions on Iran via the U.N. Security Council if a nuclear deal is not reached by the end of August, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot warned on Tuesday, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports… The Wall Street Journal looks at how Iran struck Israeli targets with increasing success during the 12-day war between the countries, as Tehran used trial and error to adapt its military strategy by using more advanced weaponry and firing from more locations toward the end of the war… The Financial Times reports on tensions between Iranian hard-liners and the country's reformists following the country's war last month with Israel, with the country's hard-line faction opposing engagement with the Trump administration that President Masoud Pezeshkian has supported… The U.N.'s special representative for Afghanistan warned that the country's support systems were under strain amid an influx of Afghans returning to the country following the implementation of new immigration laws in Iran; more than 1 million Afghans illegally living in Iran have been repatriated this year amid the crackdown… The three members of the U.N.'s Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory reportedly resigned from their positions in rapid succession earlier this month; the resignations come amid an effort by the Trump administration to sanction officials who have targeted Israel in international institutions… Twenty Palestinians were killed in a crowd rush at a Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distribution site in Khan Younis, Gaza; the organization said the "chaotic and dangerous surge" was "driven by agitators in the crowd"... |
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The Argentine Embassy in Washington held a commemoration event at the Capitol last night ahead of the 31st anniversary of the bombing of the AMIA Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, in which 85 people were killed. |
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HIROYUKI ITO/GETTY IMAGES |
World-renowned violinist, violist and conductor, Pinchas Zukerman turns 77... One of the three co-founders of Comcast Corporation, he served as its chief financial officer and vice chairman, Julian A. Brodsky turns 92... Senior U.S. district court judge for the Southern District of New York, Judge Sidney H. Stein turns 80... President of an eponymous communications firm, public speaker and coach, Betsy R. Sheerr... Co-creator of the first-ever spreadsheet program (VisiCalc), he currently serves as the chief technology officer of Alpha Software, Daniel Singer "Dan" Bricklin turns 74... Former high ranking civilian official in the Pentagon during the Bush 43 administration, now a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, Douglas J. Feith turns 72... Senior rabbi since 1997 at Temple Beth Avodah in Newton Centre, Mass., Rabbi Keith Stern... Los Angeles-based attorney, she is the president emerita of the LA chapter of the Jewish National Fund, Alyse Golden Berkley... Past vice chair of the Board of Trustees of The Jewish Federations of North America, Cynthia D. Shapira... British solicitor, he represented Princess Diana in her divorce and Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt in a libel case, Anthony Julius turns 69... Pulitzer Prize-winning and Tony Award-winning playwright and screenwriter, Tony Kushner turns 69... U.S. ambassador to the EU in the Trump 45 administration, Gordon David Sondland turns 68... Former airline executive at Northwest and Delta, now on the board of Spirit Airlines, Andrea Fischer Newman... Former president of Viacom Music and Entertainment Group, Douglas Alan Herzog turns 66... Businessman and philanthropist, owner of interests in many Israeli firms including IKEA Israel, Matthew Bronfman turns 66... Canadian journalist, he worked for CNN International for 30 years, Jonathan Mann turns 65... Former Israeli minister of science and technology, now a venture capitalist, Yizhar Nitzan Shai turns 62... Chief of staff of the Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago, Jim Rosenberg... Chicago-based entrepreneur and philanthropist, Victoria Rivka Zell... Former NFL offensive lineman, he is now the president of Collective Mortgage in Colorado, Ariel Mace Solomon turns 57... Senior scholar at the Fuchsberg Jerusalem Center, a home for Conservative Judaism in Israel, Rabbi Joshua Kulp turns 55... Israeli former professional tennis player, in 2003 she was ranked 15th in the world, Anna Smashnova turns 49... Founder of Pinkitzel, a cupcake cafe, candy boutique and gift store located in three Oklahoma cities, Jonathan Jantz... U.S. senator (R-IN) since the beginning of this year, Jim Banks turns 46... National political correspondent for The New York Times, Shane Goldmacher... Co-founder of Los Angeles-based Meteorite Social Impact and Health Action Alliance Advisors, Steven Max Levine... White House liaison to the Jewish community in the Bush 43 administration, now managing partner at Arogeti Endeavors, Scott Raymond Arogeti... Features reporter for Jewish Insider, Matthew Kassel... Founder and managing partner at Vine Ventures, Eric M. Reiner... Registered nurse and an internationally board-certified lactation consultant, Chantal Low Katz... |
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