Good Tuesday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we report on House Minority Whip Katherine Clark's walkback of her previous comment that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, and spotlight the Democratic primary in California's 32nd District, where Rep. Brad Sherman is facing challenges from two millennial political neophytes. We talk to Gaza Humanitarian Foundation head Johnnie Moore about recent threats made against him by anti-Israel activists, and report on a campaign to boycott Israel within the Association of American Geographers. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Rabbi Berel Wein, Santa Ono and Pierre Poilievre. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇 |
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- We're keeping an eye on ceasefire efforts in Cairo, following Hamas' acceptance of a Qatari- and Egypt-proposed deal. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed on Monday night to move forward with plans to take over Gaza City, saying that "enormous pressure" had pushed Hamas to accept the partial-ceasefire proposal.
- In a post to his Truth Social site on Monday, President Donald Trump said that "we will only see the return of the remaining hostages when Hamas is confronted and destroyed."
- Today marks the first yahrzeit, or Hebrew anniversary, of the deaths of six hostages in Gaza, including Israeli American Hersh Goldberg-Polin, whose family is holding a memorial this evening in Jerusalem.
- With the House and Senate out for the August recess, a number of legislators are making trips abroad. Sens. Joni Ernst (R-IA) and Markwayne Mullin (R-OK), as well as Rep. Jason Smith (R-MO), are among the legislators in Jordan this week. The delegation met with King Abdullah II yesterday in Amman.
- U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee is holding a virtual briefing at noon ET today with the American Jewish Congress.
- In Washington, the Hudson Institute is hosting the White House's Seb Gorka for a conversation about counterterrorism and the U.S.' approach to addressing global terrorist threats.
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| A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
If there is one word to describe the political mood in dealing with rising antisemitism, it would be apathy. Even the most jaw-dropping displays of anti-Jewish hatred — from abject Holocaust denial on far-right podcasts to support for Hamas' atrocities on the extreme left — are increasingly responded to with shrugs from mainstream political leaders. The most recent example of obvious antisemitism being ignored by a party's political class came out of Minnesota, where we reported about Minneapolis Democratic mayoral candidate Omar Fateh — running as a democratic socialist against sitting Mayor Jacob Frey — hiring top staff who celebrated Hamas' Oct. 7 terror attacks. In normal times, a candidate would be ashamed to be associated with extremists, and would immediately cut ties with the offending staffers. Not long ago, having ties to that type of extremist rhetoric would be disqualifying for the candidate as well. But these are not normal times. Not only has Fateh, a state senator, ignored the controversy entirely, but the local and national media has been uninterested in following up on Jewish Insider's reporting about the radical operatives on Fateh's team. Even more shocking: Two of Frey's most prominent backers, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz — have remained silent when asked about their thoughts about the antisemitism stemming from an endorsee's political rival. It's a sign that many mainstream Democrats fear that speaking out against antisemitism or anti-Israel extremism could lead to a backlash from other grassroots supporters. At best, it's a sign that speaking out against hate carries few political benefits these days. Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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AIPAC stands by Katherine Clark as she walks back 'genocide' comment |
After a video surfaced last week of Rep. Katherine Clark (D-MA), the House minority whip, referring to Israel's actions in Gaza as genocide, Clark walked back the remark on Monday — and maintained her endorsement from AIPAC amid the controversy, a spokesperson for the group told Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch. "Last week, while attending an event in my district, I repeated the word 'genocide' in response to a question," Clark told the Jewish News Syndicate on Monday. "I want to be clear that I am not accusing Israel of genocide. … We all need to work with urgency to bring the remaining hostages home, surge aid to Palestinians and oppose their involuntary relocation, remove Hamas from power and end the war." Sticking by her: AIPAC spokesperson Marshall Wittmann told JI on Monday that the organization will stick by Clark, the No. 2 Democrat in the House. "We appreciate that the congresswoman clarified her remarks, as Israel is fighting a just and moral war against a barbaric terrorist enemy. Our endorsement is unchanged and based upon her long standing support for the U.S.-Israel relationship," Wittmann said. Read the full story here. |
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Brad Sherman keeps a wary eye on younger primary opposition |
When Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) was first elected to Congress in 1996, his two opponents in the current race, Democrats Jake Rakov and Jake Levine, were 8 and 12 years old, respectively. Both candidates are making a generational appeal: They argue that California's 32nd Congressional District, which encompasses several tony neighborhoods on the west side of Los Angeles, including Malibu and the Pacific Palisades, as well as much of the San Fernando Valley, needs bold new representation to respond to the challenges of the moment. Neither Rakov, 37, nor Levine, 41, has held elected office before, and both have spent the past several years away from Los Angeles. They will each face a tough, drawn-out fight if they hope to have a chance against a battle-tested incumbent in a primary election that's still more than nine months away, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. Primary pressure: The San Fernando Valley district is solidly blue, but it's also an affluent constituency that isn't all that enamored with the progressive wing of the Democratic Party. That doesn't mean Sherman, who is 70, is automatically safe from an upstart candidate who might excite the base in his district. "At this point, he's pretty much become background noise. There's no animosity against him. His constituents are perfectly content to continue sending him back to Congress, and most of them believe that he does a perfectly serviceable job," said Dan Schnur, a political analyst in L.A. who teaches at both the University of Southern California and the University of California, Berkeley. "But that's exactly the type of incumbent that's vulnerable to a generational challenge in this landscape." Read the full story here. |
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Gaza Humanitarian Foundation head Johnnie Moore facing death threats, vandalism at Northern Virginia home |
Rev. Johnnie Moore, executive chairman of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, has spent the past two weeks under "24/7 protection while evil wants to kill me," he told attendees of the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute's annual National Jewish Retreat, held last week at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. Moore was referring to some 50 anti-Israel demonstrators who have protested outside of his Northern Virginia home multiple times in recent weeks — making death threats and painting graffiti. Moore told Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen he has received "two credible death threats," which are currently under investigation, adding that police have "done an extraordinary job taking it seriously" and made one arrest for destruction of property. Opposite effect: As well as demonstrating outside Moore's home, the Palestinian Youth Movement has also protested outside the nearby home of John Acree, the interim executive director of the GHF. "I never thought that it would be so life-threatening to do something so obviously right," Moore told supporters of JLI, an educational arm of Chabad-Lubavitch, at a VIP reception Thursday night, referring to his work with GHF. "If they're doing this to try and force us to quit, in fact it's going to have the exact opposite effect because every attack, every threat, every lie is only more proof that what we're doing is right and it's essential," Moore, a member of President Donald Trump's evangelical advisory committee, told JI. Read the full interview here. |
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Association of American Geographers wants to take Israel off the map |
The Association of American Geographers became the latest professional association to face pressure to adopt a boycott of Israel after a recent member petition urged the association "to endorse the campaign for an academic boycott of Israeli academic institutions," Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen reports. On the agenda: The campaign also calls for "financial disclosure and divestment of any AAG funds invested in corporations or state institutions profiting from the ongoing oppression of the Palestinian people." A special member meeting is scheduled for Oct. 3 to move toward a vote on the resolution after the group behind the petition succeeded in reaching the required 10% of member signatures. An AAG spokesperson told JI that the organization has "no statement or resolution about Israel-Palestine." AAG did not respond to a follow-up inquiry asking which Israeli institutions the association currently invests in. Read the full story here. |
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Santa Ono to become inaugural director of Ellison Institute of Technology |
Santo Ono, the former president of the University of Michigan, is set to become the inaugural director of the Ellison Institute of Technology, a research and development center, he announced on Monday. "I am humbled to share that I've been appointed Global President of the Ellison Institutes of Technology (EIT), reporting directly to its founder and chairman, Larry Ellison," Ono wrote in a social media post. Ellison is also the founder and chairman of the software company Oracle and a major donor to Jewish and Israeli causes, Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen reports. Background: The appointment comes two months after Ono was rejected by the Florida Board of Governors as the University of Florida's next president. At a board meeting in June, Ono, who resigned from his position at the University of Michigan in May, was questioned by the board, which oversees the state's 12 public universities, about an anti-Israel encampment last year that remained on the Michigan campus for a month. Board members also scrutinized his response to antisemitism on campus after the Oct. 7, 2023, terrorist attacks, which some called inadequate. Read the full story here. |
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Rabbi Berel Wein, lawyer, scholar and lecturer who was 'constantly doing and thinking and writing and reinventing,' dies at 91 |
Rabbi Berel Wein, the influential Orthodox rabbi, historian and "Voice of Jewish History," died Saturday in Jerusalem at 91, eJewishPhilanthropy's Jay Deitcher reports. Born in Chicago in 1934, Wein descended from seven generations of Lithuanian rabbis. He was educated in both secular studies and religious studies, receiving a bachelor's degree from Roosevelt University and a law degree from DePaul University while completing his rabbinic ordination at Hebrew Theological College. After moving to New York City, Wein began his journey of constant reinvention, first serving as executive vice president of the organization now known as the Orthodox Union. Then he became rabbinic administrator of OU Kosher and founded Congregation Bais Torah and Yeshiva Shaarei Torah in Monsey, N.Y. Life-shaping moment: As a boy studying at a Chicago yeshiva in 1946, Wein heard Rabbi Isaac Herzog, then the Ashkenazi chief rabbi of the British Mandate of Palestine, recount a plea he had made to the pope to help retrieve the thousands of Jewish children who had been hidden in Catholic institutions as a way to protect them from the Nazis. The pope refused saying the children had already been baptized. After telling his story, Herzog, his eyes still wet with tears, looked into the crowd of nearly 250 people. "I cannot do anything more for those 10,000 children," Wein recalled Herzog saying. "But what are you going to do to build the Jewish people?" In the years that followed, Wein became a lawyer, rabbi, historian, dean, producer and writer whose lectures have been purchased on tape, CD and streaming platforms over 1 million times worldwide. Read the full obituary here and sign up for eJewishPhilanthropy's Your Daily Phil newsletter here. Paying respects: Israeli President Isaac Herzog, the grandson of Rabbi Herzog, attended the shiva for Wein. |
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How Would Mamdani Govern?: The Atlantic's Michael Powell considers what strain of socialist governance New York City Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani would, if elected, bring to City Hall. "Mamdani, 33, conveys that he is a man prepared to work with the organs of capitalist democracy to progressive ends and not to demand ideological litmus tests. But the Mamdani who takes great pride in his identity as a member of Democratic Socialists of America and who told 'Meet the Press' in late June that 'I don't think we should have billionaires' — to the alarm of Wall Street donors — has hardly disappeared. By his own account, his political journey from state assemblyman to mayoral nominee owes almost entirely to his umbilical connection with DSA. … The political left from which Mamdani emerges is a collection of disorderly tribes, sheltering self-styled revolutionaries alongside those who prize compromise and electoral victory, and those who want to sand the edges off capitalism alongside those who want to replace it altogether." [TheAtlantic] Still On Guard: Bloomberg's Golnar Motevalli looks at how Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has become "more critical" to Tehran's survival following the 12-day war between Israel and Iran in June. "The Guard comprises a navy, ground troops, aerospace, an elite unit called the Quds Force and the Basij volunteer paramilitaries. It also has its own intelligence organization that's known to directly compete with — and sometimes work against — the government's Ministry of Intelligence. … Now, the galvanizing impact of Israel's attacks on nationalist sentiment in Iran may have already helped improve public support for the IRGC, according to Narges Bajoghli, associate professor of Middle East Studies at the School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University. 'People are angry at them, but they also realize that there is no other force in the country,' she said. 'What they're committed to today, is about sovereign independence and the idea of resistance to Western and Israeli imperialism.'" [Bloomberg] Ending Hostage Diplomacy: In The Washington Post, Diane Foley, whose son James Foley was killed in Syria by ISIS after two years in captivity, suggests how the U.S. government can more forcefully address the taking of American hostages by rogue and enemy regimes. "The Trump administration should swiftly exercise this new authority to signal that engaging in hostage diplomacy has consequences. Designated states could face visa restrictions, sanctions, controls on U.S. exports, reductions or elimination of foreign assistance, and asset seizures. … Eleven years after Jim's murder, the use of Americans as political leverage remains a tragic feature of international relations. A coordinated effort to deter and prevent unjust captivity abroad is the necessary next step to ensure that our government not only never again abandons its citizens, but also places their safety and security at the forefront of U.S. foreign policy." [WashPost] |
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President Donald Trump said on Monday afternoon that he had begun making arrangements for a meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin, following his meeting with Zelensky and foreign heads of state in Washington earlier in the day… The State Department pulled the visas of some 6,000 foreign students, the majority of whom had overstayed their visas or committed crimes while in the U.S.; between 200-300 of the visas revoked were due to terror ties, including fundraising for U.S.-designated terrorist groups… Rep. David Schweikert (R-AZ) is mulling joining the state's 2026 gubernatorial race, potentially setting up a high-stakes contest in the state's purple 1st Congressional District, where five Democrats have already entered the race… Soho House reached a $2.7 billion deal in which it will be taken private by a group of New York-based investors led by MCR Hotels; as part of the deal, Apollo Global Management, led by partner Reed Rayman, will contribute $800 million in debt and equity financing… CBS News spotlights the Chicago chapter of "Lox & Loaded," a group that trains members of the Jewish community and allies on firearm use, amid a rise in antisemitic attacks and concerns about personal safety among community members… George Washington University suspended its campus chapter of Jewish Voice for Peace through May 2026, following a series of complaints over misconduct, harassment and Title VI violations by the group; a member of the JVP chapter told GWU's Hatchet that the group planned to disaffiliate from the university over the multiple clashes with the school's administration in recent years… Canadian Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre won a byelection to a rural Alberta-based House of Commons seat, four months after losing his seat in an Ottawa-area district; Poilievre won the seat, which was vacated by Conservative MP Damien Kurek so that Poilievre could run, with 80% of the vote… Norges, Norway's sovereign wealth fund, sold off six Israeli companies in addition to the half dozen it had previously announced divesting last month; Norwegian Finance Minister Jens Stoltenberg told reporters that "there might be more exclusions to come" as Oslo's central bank makes more referrals to the fund's external ethics council… Former U.K. Labour MP Zarah Sultana said that Jeremy Corbyn, the former Labour leader who was ousted over the party's handling of antisemitism and formed a new party with Sultana last month, had made a "serious mistake" in "capitulating" to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance's working definition of antisemitism… The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation unveiled a pilot program that will allow Palestinian families to reserve food parcels in advance, in an effort to increase order at the distribution sites, which have faced crowding, violence and supply issues… U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack, who is also serving as Syria envoy, called on Israel to comply with a phased plan to end its military operations in Lebanon in exchange for the disarmament of Hezbollah by the end of the year… Israel's Foreign Ministry revoked the visas of Australian diplomats to the Palestinian Authority, who live in Israel, following Canberra's decision last week to cancel the visa of hard-right MK Simcha Rothman… South Sudanese officials privately confirmed talks with Israel regarding the potential resettlement of Palestinians in Gaza in the East African nation, despite public denials that talks are taking place… Qatar Airways plans to open its first exclusive lounge in the U.S. in John F. Kennedy Airport's new international terminal; the 15,000-square-foot lounge will be built in the airport's new Terminal 1… Bloomberg looks at the logistical, financial and construction challenges facing Saudi Arabia's Trojena ski resort project, located within the country's broader Neom project, as Riyadh works to have the resort constructed in time to host the 2029 Asian Winter Games… Graphic designer Joe Caroff, whose most famous works included James Bond's 007 logo and the posters for "West Side Story" and "Cabaret," died at 103… Linguist Robin Lakoff, who focused on gender and language, died at 82… |
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Israeli President Isaac Herzog (second from right) and Israeli First Lady Michal Herzog (center) met this week with IsraAid CEO Yotam Polizer (left); Ruthie Rousso, the head of World Central Kitchen's Israel operations (second from left); and World Central Kitchen founder José Andrés during Andrés' trip to Israel and Gaza. |
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DIMITRIOS KAMBOURIS/GETTY IMAGES FOR TRIBECA FESTIVAL |
Actress and producer, known for her role as Deputy Chief Brenda Leigh Johnson in the 109 episodes of the TNT crime drama "The Closer," Kyra Sedgwick turns 60... One of the earliest Silicon Valley venture capital investors with positions in firms like Intel and Apple, Arthur Rock turns 99... Ventura County, Calif., resident, Jerry Epstein... Past member of both houses of the South Dakota Legislature, Stanford "Stan" M. Adelstein turns 94... Retired president of Ono Academic College in Israel, she was Israel's ambassador to the United Nations from 2008 to 2010, Gabriela Shalev turns 84... Photographer and director of television programs and movies, Neal Slavin... Professor emeritus of religion and philosophy at the University of Toronto, he is the author of 16 books, David Novak turns 84... 42nd president of the United States, William Jefferson Clinton turns 79... Retired reading teacher for the NYC Department of Education, she co-founded the kosher pantry at Bethesda Hospital in Boynton Beach, Fla., Miriam Baum Benkoe... Actor and director, Adam Arkin turns 69... Gavriel Benavraham... Managing partner at Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz, Mark C. Rifkin... Co-founder and CEO of Apollo Global Management, he is the board chairman of the UJA-Federation of New York, Marc J. Rowan turns 63... Chairman of the FCC in the Obama administration, he is now a senior advisor at the Carlyle Group, Julius Genachowski turns 63... Executive editor of The New York Times, Joseph Kahn turns 61... Managing partner and talent agent at William Morris Endeavor, he is active in the contemporary art world as a collector, Dan Aloni turns 61... Former member of Knesset, he is the son of former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Omri Sharon turns 61... Executive administrator of the Ventura, Calif., accounting firm, Morgan, Daggett & Wotman, Carolynn Wotman... District attorney of Queens, N.Y., Melinda R. Katz turns 60... Founder and CEO of The Friedlander Group, Ezra Friedlander... Private equity financier and a founding partner of Searchlight Capital Partners, he recently joined the board of Estee Lauder, Eric Louis Zinterhofer turns 54... Chair of the Orthodox Union and past chair of The Associated: Jewish Federation of Baltimore, Yehuda L. Neuberger... Contributing editor for The Daily Beast and the author of three books, Molly Jong-Fast turns 47... Businessman and investor, Brett Icahn turns 46... Managing partner of Handmade Capital, Ross Hinkle... Laser radial sailor, she represented Israel at the 2008 (Beijing) and 2012 (London) Olympics, Nufar Edelman turns 43... Founder and principal at Aron's Kissena Farms and Cedar Market, Aaron Yechiel Hirtz... President at Kansas City-based Eighteen Capital Group, Isaac Gortenburg... Rapper, singer and songwriter, known by his stage name Hoodie Allen, Steven Adam Markowitz turns 37... Team manager at HubSpot, Cassandra Federbusz... |
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