Good Monday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we report on the resolution of tensions between U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee and Israel's Interior Ministry over visa hurdles faced by Christian Zionists, and talk to Sen. Mark Warner about the American strikes last month targeting Iran's nuclear program. We preview the House Financial Services Committee's upcoming vote on Rep. Mike Lawler's legislation conditioning the repeal of Syria sanctions, and cover Columbia University's announcement that its faculty-run University Senate will no longer have oversight over student disciplinary procedures. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Jacob Frey, Adam Katz and Yoav Segev. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇 |
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- The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations kicks off a three-day mission to Israel today.
- Oral arguments in Harvard's lawsuit against the Trump administration's freezing of approximately $3 billion in federal funds begin today in Boston.
- Lawmakers in Texas return to Austin today for the start of a special legislative session that will take up, among other issues, potential statewide redistricting that could potentially give Republicans an additional five House seats but may make other safe GOP districts more competitive.
- Israel launched fresh drone strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen earlier today, days after a ballistic missile fired by the Iran-backed terror group triggered sirens across central Israel.
- We're keeping an eye on Iranian nuclear talks, following an announcement this morning from Iran's Foreign Ministry that Tehran's deputy foreign minister will meet this Friday in Istanbul with his counterparts from the U.K., France and Germany to continue negotiations. Over the weekend, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with senior Iranian official Ali Larijani.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
A newly released CNN poll, conducted this month, illustrates the resilience of a hawkish DNA within the Republican Party and among its voters even amid the rise of an isolationist strain that has sought to gain influence in the GOP during President Donald Trump's second term. The poll asked respondents: "Do you think the United States should or should not take the leading role among all other countries in the world in trying to solve international problems?" Overall, 43% took the more active approach, while 56% took a more isolationist view. Republicans, however, remained the strongest advocates of a muscular American role in world affairs, with 52% supporting America taking a leading role and 47% opposed. By contrast, just 42% of Democrats and 39% of independents shared the more hawkish worldview. Notably, the shift in more isolationist sentiment was almost entirely driven by Democrats and independents since the last CNN survey in March, which found majority support for significant American global engagement. In the March survey, a 57% majority of Democrats preferred more American involvement in the world, a number that dropped 15 points in the last four months. The Republican share of those preferring American engagement remained steady at 52%. The results from the CNN polls suggest there's a more committed core of Republican-voting hawks that is more resilient than the shifting political winds, whereas the Democratic foreign policy worldview appears more dependent on partisanship and what's happening in the news at the time. Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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| Netanyahu's office resolves high-profile visa issue for American Christian groups |
ANDREW HARNIK/GETTY IMAGES |
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office resolved a dispute between U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee and Israeli Interior Minister Moshe Arbel over the denial of visas to workers and volunteers for several evangelical Christian organizations, two sources involved in the matter told Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov on Sunday. Huckabee sent a letter to Arbel last Wednesday, expressing "great distress" and "profound disappointment" that after the two met to discuss the matter earlier this year, the Interior Ministry's visa department continued to conduct investigations into American and other evangelical organizations seeking visas for their workers. Solution found: "A solution has been reached to the satisfaction of all parties. The evangelical Christian organizations active in Israel, which represent the vast majority of Zionists in the world today, will receive all of the visas they need through a streamlined and efficient application process," Calev Myers, the attorney for the organizations told JI on Monday. Hours before the issue was resolved, a source in the Prime Minister's Office told JI, "this is something that we consider to be of urgent importance. We have every intention of solving this problem very quickly … It is being handled with the proper sensitivity between the Prime Minister's Office and the embassy." Read the full story here. |
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House committee to vote on Lawler bill modifying Syria sanctions |
BILL CLARK/CQ-ROLL CALL, INC VIA GETTY IMAGES |
The House Financial Services Committee is set to consider legislation by Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY) this week that aims to create oversight and set conditions for lifting the repeal of sanctions on Syria, but stops short of full repeal of the 2019 Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act sanctions bill that other lawmakers are pushing on a bipartisan basis, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Why it matters: That the House is moving forward with Lawler's legislation, which sets conditions for waiving Caesar Act sanctions, rather than the bipartisan Caesar Act repeal effort may indicate a level of continued skepticism from some House members about the prospect of full sanctions relief for the new Syrian government pushed by the Trump administration. Read the full story here. |
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National Education Association rejects ADL boycott proposal |
KRISTOFFER TRIPPLAAR/SIPA VIA AP IMAGES |
The National Education Association, the largest teachers' union in the country, announced on Friday that it would not cut ties with the Anti-Defamation League, declining to implement a contentious resolution approved by its governing body earlier this month that sought to target the Jewish civil rights organization, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. What is said: "After consideration, it was determined that this proposal would not further NEA's commitment to academic freedom, our membership or our goals," the union's board of directors said in a statement. The decision came nearly two weeks after the measure was adopted by the NEA's representative assembly, its annual leadership gathering that drew more than 6,000 union delegates. "There is no doubt that antisemitism is on the rise. Without equivocation, NEA stands strongly against antisemitism. We always have and we always will," the NEA's board wrote. "In this time of division, fighting antisemitism, anti-Arab racism, and other forms of discrimination will take more resources, not fewer. We are ready." Read the full story here. |
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Sen. Mark Warner: U.S. strikes on Iran were a 'success,' but what happens next is critical |
FRANCIS CHUNG/POLITICO VIA AP IMAGES |
Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) told Jewish Insider's Marc Rod on Friday that he's inclined to view the Trump administration's strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities as a "success," if negotiations with Tehran resume and barring substantial future retaliation from Iran. What he's saying: "I will acknowledge the successfulness of the Israeli attacks and how back-foot the regime was. The fact that they didn't launch the thousands of missiles," Warner told JI on the sidelines of the Aspen Security Forum. "I was concerned about an attack that didn't bring Congress along. And I do think there was a huge process foul when the Gang of Eight wasn't notified and the Republicans [were] — Trump['s first administration] never did that — but I have never contested the success. … If the current status quo is the same a year from now and it actually leads towards further negotiation — success." Read the full interview here. |
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Sen. Chris Coons: U.S. strikes on Iran could ultimately be a positive step |
DREW ANGERER/GETTY IMAGES |
Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) said on Friday that the U.S. strikes on Iran could ultimately produce a positive outcome, a softening of the Delaware senator's previous skepticism, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports from the Aspen Security Forum. What he said: "The strike on Iran is one that I disagreed with because of the process, the lack of consultation with Congress, the partisan way that Republicans were notified at the most senior levels [and] Democrats were not," Coons said at the conference. He said he also had not expected that the administration would be able to avoid significant Iranian retaliation and an escalating conflict. "I frankly, did not believe that we would end up in the period we seem to be in where a counter-strike by Iran against American soldiers and interests has not yet come," Coons continued. Also speaking at the forum: Retired Gen. David Petraeus, the former director of the CIA and head of U.S. Central Command, said on Friday that, in the post Oct. 7, 2023, environment, Israel will no longer tolerate threats to its security throughout the region, including a resumption of Iran's nuclear program. Read the full story here. Differing worldview: Former National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan suggested at the Aspen Security Forum on Friday that the U.S. strikes on Iran had not been necessary and didn't accomplish the fundamental goal of permanently stopping Iran's nuclear program. |
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Columbia moves student disciplinary authority out of University Senate |
MAXYM MARUSENKO/NURPHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGES |
In a move called for by pro-Israel students at Columbia University, the school announced on Friday that disciplinary action and rules surrounding student protests would be moved out of the purview of the faculty-run University Senate and into the provost's office, Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen reports. Student reaction: "This is the most encouraging and commendable action taken by Columbia's administration to address the systemic problems within the university since [the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terrorist attacks]," Noa Fay, a graduate student entering her last year in Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs, told JI. "Revoking the University Senate's power over disciplinary and rule-making procedures has been top of the institutional reform list for many Columbians who wish to see our university restored to order and excellence." Read the full story here. |
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The Trump Whisperer: The New Yorker's Antonia Hitchens profiles Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, looking at the former Cantor Fitzgerald CEO's yearslong friendship with President Donald Trump. "Lutnick and President Donald Trump speak on the phone most nights, at around one in the morning, just after Lutnick gets in bed. They talk about 'real stuff,' like Canadian steel tariffs, Lutnick told me, and also about 'nothing,' which he summarized as 'sporting events, people, who'd you have dinner with, what was this guy like, can you believe what this guy did, what's the TV like, I saw this on TV, what'd you think of what this guy said on TV, what did you think about my press conference, how about this Truth?' Of course, Lutnick said, 'Trump has other people he calls late at night.' But does he have other people he always calls?" [NewYorker] Confronting Cambridge: The Atlantic's Franklin Foer does a deep dive into the tenure of Harvard President Alan Garber, who has handled much of the fallout from the school's handling of post-Oct. 7 campus antisemitism as well as Harvard's legal battles with the Trump administration. "Even as Harvard sits on the receiving end of vitriolic attacks from the right, Garber has turned inward — willing to engage with Harvard's harshest critics and to admit that even bad-faith attacks sometimes land on uncomfortable truths. He's treated the university's crisis as an opportunity, leveraging the looming threat of Trump to make changes that would have been politically impossible in less ominous times. The leader of Harvard, bane of MAGA, agrees with much of the underlying substance of the MAGA critique of higher education, at least when stripped of its rhetorical froth and fury. He knows that elite higher education is suffering a crisis of legitimacy, one that is, in no small measure, of its own making, because it gives fodder to those who caricature it as arrogant and privileged." [TheAtlantic] The Gaza Debate: In eJewishPhilanthropy, Michael Berenbaum and Menachem Z. Rosensaft respond to genocide scholar Omer Bartov's recent New York Times op-ed alleging Israel is engaging in genocide. "We are not arguing that this war has always been waged appropriately or that it has been waged proportionally. Nor do we suggest that Israel or any other country involved in warfare cannot be accused of or should not be held accountable for other alleged violations of international law, including crimes against humanity, war crimes and even ethnic cleansing. But those are separate questions from whether a genocide is being committed; and unless such alleged violations of international law satisfy the elements, including specific intent, as defined in Article II of the Convention, they do not constitute genocide." [eJP] Cowed on Campus: In Tablet, Eric Kaufmann looks at recent survey data from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression that indicates shifts in the behaviors of Jewish college students as campus climates become increasingly politicized in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attacks and ensuing war in Gaza. "A closer look at the 2024 data shows that the pro-Palestinian tent encampments had a big impact: Before they went up on April 17, 28% of Ivy League Jewish students self-censored. Afterward, 40% did. Across all institutions in the FIRE data, statistical analysis shows that the encampments increased Jewish self-censorship while reducing it for conservatives. Conservative speech has for years been the least free of any major demographic, but Jews have now converged with them. In the Ivy League, Jews now self-censor more than conservatives do." [Tablet] |
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Unnamed Trump administration officials are reportedly angry with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's recent actions, telling Axios that the prime minister has "acted like a madman" who "bombs everything all the time"; the White House officials expressed concerns that Netanyahu's actions could "undermine" President Donald Trump's efforts in the region... House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) met for an hour on Friday with New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani but did not issue an endorsement for the candidate; a spokesperson for Jeffries said the two had a "constructive, candid and community-centered" conversation that also included "a variety of other important issues, including public safety, rising antisemitism, gentrification and the importance of taking back the House in 2026"... Reps. Mark Alford (R-MO), Don Davis (D-NC), Tony Gonzales (R-TX), John Carter (R-TX), Sam Graves (R-MO) and Juan Ciscomani (R-AZ) introduced a resolution congratulating the fighter and bomber wings involved in the U.S. attack on Iran's nuclear facilities… Sens. John Curtis (R-UT) and Jacky Rosen (D-NV) introduced a resolution commemorating the anniversaries of the bombings of the Israeli Embassy in Argentina and the Buenos Aires AMIA Jewish community center; in the House, Reps. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL), Adriano Espaillat (D-NY) and Tony Gonzales (R-TX) introduced a resolution condemning the AMIA bombing… Reps. Jefferson Shreve (R-IN), Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), Bill Huizenga (R-MI), Maria Elvira Salazar (R-FL) and Mark Messmer (R-IN) introduced a bill requiring the administration to provide a strategy to counter Iran and Hezbollah's influence in Latin America… Pennsylvania state Sen. Doug Mastriano, who in 2022 lost to Gov. Josh Shapiro in the commonwealth's gubernatorial race, teased a potential rematch, posting different logos for a "Doug Mastriano for Governor" campaign… Minnesota's statewide Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party endorsed state Sen. Omar Fateh, a democratic socialist, over incumbent Mayor Jacob Frey… The Wall Street Journal spotlights the efforts of Robert Kraft's Foundation to Combat Antisemitism, under the leadership of Adam Katz, to use analytics to identify digital trends in antisemitism, craft countermessaging and share data with social media platforms and universities… Harvard Business School graduate Yoav Segev filed a lawsuit against the university and its police department, alleging that both failed to protect him from being assaulted by anti-Israel campus activists and that school officials obstructed an investigation into the incident… Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought medical attention over the weekend after falling ill from eating spoiled food; the prime minister will work from home until Tuesday while he recovers… Israel, working with the U.S., reportedly delivered aid to the Syrian Druze city of Sweida as a ceasefire reached late last week appeared to hold; more than 1,100 are believed to be dead in the sectarian violence that drew in Syrian government forces... Israel will not renew the visa of Jonathan Whittall, the head of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in the West Bank and Gaza, citing his "biased and hostile conduct against Israel"... Hamas officials in Gaza claimed at least 85 people were killed trying to access humanitarian aid near the Zikim border crossing; the IDF, which said it fired "warning shots" to remove an "immediate threat," disputed the number, saying the "reported number of casualties does not align with the existing information"... The Wall Street Journal looks at the logistical and operational challenges facing the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation amid increasing concerns over humanitarian aid distribution in the enclave… Senior Christian leaders from Jerusalem, including Cardinal Pierbattista Pizzaballa, visited the sole Catholic church in Gaza, which was damaged by an Israeli strike last week that also killed three people… Brig. Gen. (res.) Giora Even Epstein, the most decorated Israeli Air Force fighter pilot in the country's history, died at 87… |
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Israeli President Isaac Herzog (right) received the credentials of Polish Ambassador to Israel Maciej Hunia. Hunia's arrival marks the first time in four years that Warsaw has had an ambassador posted to Israel. In addition to Hunia, Herzog also received the credentials of Malta's new envoy to Israel, Ambassador Claude Bonello. |
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DIA DIPASUPIL/GETTY IMAGES FOR TRIBECA FESTIVAL |
Actress and producer, Alysia Reiner turns 55... Laureate of the 1992 Nobel Prize in chemistry, Rudolph A. Marcus turns 102... President at Admar Group, Henry Dean Ostberg turns 97... Retired CEO of Sony/ATV, a large music publishing firm, he is a member of the Songwriters Hall of Fame, Martin Bandier turns 84... Professor emeritus in the Department of Physics at Bar-Ilan University, he won the Israel Prize in 2018, Shlomo Havlin turns 83... Director of the Center for the Political Future at USC, Robert Shrum turns 82... Criminal defense attorney, known for representing many politicians, celebrities and organized crime defendants, Benjamin Brafman turns 77... Former member of the U.K.'s House of Commons, now in the House of Lords, Baroness Susan Veronica Kramer turns 75... U.S. senator (R-WY), John Barrasso turns 73... Chairman and CEO at Quantitative Financial Strategies, Sanford "Sandy" Jay Grossman turns 72... Endocrinologist and professor at Columbia University's medical school, she is an honorary president of NYC's Central Synagogue, Shonni Joy Silverberg, MD... Professor at Columbia Law School and daughter of the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Jane Carol Ginsburg turns 70... Brooklyn resident, Irene Ostrovsky... Comedian and actor, best known for his five seasons on "Saturday Night Live" ending in 1990, Jon Lovitz turns 68... Former chief rabbi of Moscow, his opposition to the Ukraine war forced him to leave Russia, Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt turns 62... Literary agent at the William Morris Endeavor book department, Eric Matthew Simonoff turns 58... Professor of astronomy at MIT and winner of a 2013 MacArthur genius award, Sara Seager turns 54... Brazilian fashion designer best known for avant-garde designs and eclectic prints, Alexandre Herchcovitch turns 54... CEO of Fanatics, licensed sports merchandise and digital sports platform, Michael G. Rubin turns 53... Founder, president and CEO of Securing America's Future Energy (SAFE) and the Electrification Coalition, Raphael "Robbie" Diamond... Rabbi of Congregation Bais Naftali in Los Angeles, his YouTube channel has over 4.6 million views, Rabbi Yoel Gold... Online media personality and director of product management at Electronic Arts (EA) in Vancouver, British Columbia, Veronica Belmont turns 43... CEO of Women of Reform Judaism since 2023, Rabbi Liz P.G. Hirsch... Clinical social worker, Aniko Gomory-Pink... Entrepreneur and political activist, Chloé Simone Valdary turns 32... Policy advisor at Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, Zachary A. Marshall... Recruiter at Tines, Rachel Elizabeth Nieves... Attorney in Madrid and secretary general of the Federation of Jewish Communities of Spain until 2021, Elias Cohen... |
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