๐ Good Monday morning! In today's Daily Kickoff, we have the scoop on a new resolution from Senate Democrats condemning Nick Fuentes, Tucker Carlson and Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts, and cover Rep. Ro Khanna's recent appearances at two Bay Area synagogues. We report on former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's comments at the Doha Forum about youth indoctrination against Israel, and cover the Trump administration's newly released National Security Strategy. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Gov. Josh Shapiro, Shalom Baranes and Jeff Yass. Today's Daily Kickoff was curated by Jewish Insider Executive Editor Melissa Weiss with an assist from Marc Rod. Have a tip? Email us here. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.๐ | |
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- U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Mike Waltz is in Israel today for meetings with senior officials. Waltz was in Amman, Jordan, over the weekend, where he and EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas met with King Abdullah II to discuss humanitarian aid efforts. Waltz noted that he entered into Israel through the Allenby crossing, which had been briefly closed after two Israeli soldiers were killed in a September terror attack at the crossing. The U.S., Waltz said, was "working hard to keep this crossing open for humanitarian aid and commerce."
- Israeli President Isaac Herzog wraps up his two-day trip to New York today. Following last night's keynote at Yeshiva University's Hanukkah dinner (more below on that), he'll address the American Zionist Movement's Biennial National Assembly, which concludes today.
- Elsewhere in New York, Rachel and Jon Goldberg-Polin are slated to speak at Temple Emanu-El.
- Defense Tech Week begins today in Washington and runs through Friday.
- Hillel International's annual General Assembly kicks off today in Boston.
- Abu Dhabi Finance Week kicks off today in the United Arab Emirates. Speakers today include Brevan Howard Asset Management's Alan Howard, the Carlyle Group's David Rubenstein and Bill Gates.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S GABBY DEUTCH |
The 2028 presidential race is still well over a year away from beginning in earnest. But if there's any indication about whether Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, long considered a rising star in the Democratic Party, is seriously considering running, it's that the moderate swing-state governor recently sat down for interviews for two major magazine features — in The Atlantic and The New Yorker — both published in the last week. Shapiro faced questions about his ambitions, his successes and failures and his take on the increasingly divisive and vitriolic nature of American politics. The two interviews also offer a fresh look at how Shapiro, one of the most prominent Jewish politicians in America, thinks about and practices Judaism from his perch in Harrisburg. When he ran for governor in 2022, his first major campaign ad featured footage of him and his family observing Shabbat. He told The Atlantic's Tim Alberta that Friday night dinners are "still a sacrosanct moment for our family." But he also shared that he and his family have lately attended synagogue services "far less than at any other point in our lives." Shapiro regularly invokes religion in public addresses, choosing to speak about "my faith" rather than more specifically referring to his Jewish faith. "I feel more connected to my faith today than at any other time in my life. Truly. And I probably pray more now than at any other time in my life. But my connection to an institution of prayer, or a sort of formal structure of that prayer, has dramatically decreased," Shapiro shared. "The sort of ritualistic practices became less of a focus of the way we practice our faith — with the exception, of course, of Friday nights." In conversation with The New Yorker's Benjamin Wallace-Wells, Shapiro opened up about the arson attack on the governor's residence in April, hours after his family had concluded their Passover Seder. At the October sentencing hearing for the assailant, Shapiro said for the first time that he may have been targeted, in part, for his Jewish faith. "The prosecutor felt it was important to introduce into evidence the bomber's claims that he did that because of 'what I did to the Palestinians,' so clearly there was some motivation because of my faith," Shapiro told The New Yorker, which reported that the dining room — now restored after being severely burned — features a small display of charred cups and dishes from the Seder, to remember that frightening evening. But Shapiro's subsequent comments backed away from personally tagging an antisemitic motive on the perpetrator: "I think it is dangerous for you or anyone else to think about those who perpetrate these violent attacks as linear thinkers, meaning that they have a left-wing ideology or a right-wing ideology, or that they have a firm set of beliefs the way you might or I might. These are clearly irrational thinkers." Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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๐ Evening intelligence, exclusively for subscribers. |
Daily Overtime brings you what we're tracking at the end of the day — and what's coming next. |
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| Schumer, Senate Democrats introduce resolution condemning Fuentes, Carlson, Roberts |
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and nearly all Senate Democrats are set to introduce a resolution on Monday condemning neo-Nazi influencer Nick Fuentes, Tucker Carlson for hosting Fuentes on his show, Heritage Foundation President Kevin Roberts for defending Carlson and Trump administration official Paul Ingrassia, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. What it says: The resolution highlights Carlson's failure to "push back on or reject the claims made by Fuentes" and that Carlson "at times even validat[ed] his framing." It also notes that Carlson was a keynote speaker at the 2024 Republican National Convention. The resolution also specifically highlights that Roberts posted a video defending Carlson and attacking those criticizing him — accusing Roberts of employing "antisemitic dog whistles" — as well as for refusing to take down the video even as he as apologized for portions of it. Read the full story here. |
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In 2020 AIPAC position paper, Michael Blake vowed to support Israel, highlighted Black-Jewish unity |
In a position paper shared with AIPAC in 2020, Michael Blake, who is challenging Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) in the Democratic primary in New York's 15th Congressional District, vowed to offer strong support for Israel and to fight against anti-Israel sentiment, and emphasized the connections he feels as a Black person to the Israeli people and the Jewish community, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Why it matters: At the time, Blake — who had been an AIPAC affiliate for years — was seeking the group's support for his 2020 run for the district. But now, in his second campaign against Torres, Blake is making criticism of Israel and strident opposition to AIPAC a central theme of his campaign. Blake had expressed similar views in support of Israel in an interview with JI at the time of his 2020 campaign, but his pursuit of AIPAC's support five years ago highlights the extent to which Blake has flipped on the issue in his latest campaign. Read the full story here. |
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Khanna addresses California synagogues on Israel policy, antisemitism |
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), who has repeatedly made headlines for his sharpening criticism of Israel's operations in Gaza while bashing pro-Israel groups, addressed two synagogues in his district this weekend about Israel policy and antisemitism, fielding questions from congregants, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Khanna, considered to be a 2028 presidential contender, addressed Congregation Beth Am in Los Altos after Friday evening Shabbat services, and Congregation Emanu-El in San Jose on Saturday. Khanna's office shared excerpts of both events with JI. What he said: Though Khanna is co-sponsoring a resolution describing the war in Gaza as a genocide, he gave a somewhat equivocal response on the issue. "I believe that people of good faith can disagree on what to call it. I have said that I would defer to the international bodies and that the United States should follow international law," Khanna said. "What I do know is that what happened, in my view, was not right. Even though Israel was attacked and Oct. 7 was a terrorist attack, I think [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu's response was disproportionate." He also praised Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, two moderate Democrats, as "offering a vision of how we move forward," while implicitly criticizing California Gov. Gavin Newsom for aping President Donald Trump's rhetoric and posture on social media. Read the full story here. |
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Hillary Clinton reiterates concerns about anti-Israel 'propaganda' targeting American youth |
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, speaking at the Doha Forum in Qatar on Sunday, underscored her recent comments that American youth are turning against Israel due to social media and lack of historical knowledge, Jewish Insider's Matthew Shea reports. Going deeper: Clinton was pressed by moderator Ravi Agrawal — the editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy, who has taken a critical stance toward Israel's war against Hamas — to elaborate on her remarks at the recent Israel Hayom summit, in which she said that young people lack "context" on the conflict and are exposed to "propaganda" on social media. "I've had many conversations with very smart young people," said Clinton, referring to a class that she teaches with the dean at Columbia University's School of International Public Affairs. "In talking with them about their views, which they are entitled to those views based on whatever information they had, but they did not always know why they were saying what they said." Read the full story here. More from Doha: The Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, an anti-Israel think tank in Washington that has pushed sympathetic positions on Iran, sponsored a panel discussion at the confab — further underscoring the degree to which the two-day conference included a range of extreme voices, Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel reports. The panel, billed as "Iran and the Changing Regional Security Environment," featured former Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, who has used antisemitic rhetoric and was called the "propaganda arm" of the Iranian regime by officials in the first Trump administration, in conversation with Trita Parsi, executive vice president of Quincy and the founder of the National Iranian American Council, a pro-Iran lobbying group. Barrack weighs in: Speaking at the Doha Forum, U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack, who is also serving as the Trump administration's Syria envoy, said in a conversation about bringing democracy to Damascus that "Israel can claim that it's a democracy but in this region really what has worked the best…is a benevolent monarchy." |
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House Speaker Mike Johnson travels to N.Y. to boost Rep. Mike Lawler in New Square |
House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) visited New Square, N.Y., on Sunday alongside Rep. Mike Lawler (R-NY), Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. The trip, which comes as Lawler gears up for his third congressional race in a top Democratic target, marked Johnson's third to the Hasidic village in Rockland County since becoming House speaker. The Louisiana Republican also met privately with David Twersky, the grand rabbi of New Square, during his visit. Background: New Square has proven to be a critical voting bloc in the battleground House district. Lawler received a crucial endorsement from the community in 2024. Both Republicans and Democrats have worked hard to court New Square in recent years — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY) and then-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) also visited the community last October alongside Mondaire Jones, Lawler's Democratic opponent in the 2024 election. Former President Joe Biden also reached out to Twersky in the run-up to the 2022 midterms. Read the full story here. |
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Trump's national security strategy balances global engagement with 'high bar' for intervention |
As an ideological battle plays out in the Republican Party over whether America should adopt an engaged approach to global affairs or take a more restrained one, a new National Security Strategy authored by the Trump administration offers a clear-cut answer — presenting America as deeply engaged, so long as the policies adopted by Washington are deemed by President Donald Trump to put "America First," Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. Domestic focus: The document takes aim at prior American commanders-in-chief, saying such documents authored by past administrations became "bloated and unfocused" by focusing on the entire world. "Not every country, region, issue, or cause — however worthy — can be the focus of American strategy. The purpose of foreign policy is the protection of core national interests; that is the sole focus of this strategy," the document asserts. "For a country whose interests are as numerous and diverse as ours, rigid adherence to non-interventionism is not possible," the strategy states. "Yet this predisposition should set a high bar for what constitutes a justified intervention." Read the full story here. |
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Tighten the Screws: In Time, Iranian human rights activist Narges Mohammadi calls for global pressure on Tehran to assist Iranians in their fight against the regime of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. "The truth is, Iran is already in a transition. But transitions can move in many directions. The Iranian people have proved their courage. They have endured prisons, censorship, surveillance, bullets, and the loss of their children، yet they continue to fight. Not violently. Violence, whether imposed from outside or from within, is not the answer. What they ask for is not intervention, but recognition; not foreign armies, but international solidarity; not war, but peace. … Change in Iran requires global pressure to end human rights violations, gender apartheid, and executions; to free political and ideological prisoners; and to enable the functioning of civil society institutions. We need the international community to rethink its approach to 'change' in Iran, and lay the groundwork for a transition from authoritarianism to democracy." [Time] Right to Worship: In the New York Daily News, Ken Marcus, the founder of the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law, suggests that New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani's accusation that a recent synagogue event on immigration to Israel violated international law, gave a green light to violations of a law protecting access to places of worship. "As the leader of New York City, his words have heavy implications. In one sentence, a spokeswoman for Mamdani undermined the legitimacy of protected religious conduct. This gave protesters a greenlight for antisemitic conduct, sending them a signal that conduct against religious institutions can be morally or politically justified. But the law is not up to the interpretation of Mamdani. Politicians do not have the authority to determine which religious gatherings are protected by federal law. And this is a critical part of the story: a federal civil rights protection was not only ignored, it was challenged by a man who will soon be responsible for upholding it." [NYDN] Draft Dodging: In the Jerusalem Journal, Israeli Likud MK Dan Illouz explains why he broke ranks with his party over the recent Haredi draft bill that Illouz does not believe will not rectify the deeply divisive issue. "A fake solution is not unity – it is escapism. A pretend draft law that enshrines inequality instead of addressing it will not calm the public; it will deepen division. It will tell the serving public — the backbone of the Likud — that their burden is invisible. When our soldiers risk their lives, the least we owe them is honesty. Likud voters understand this. They know that without a fair and effective enlistment framework, Israel's security — and social cohesion — will erode. They know that a country that cannot maintain a strong, broad army cannot survive in the Middle East. And they know that the path to long-term unity between secular, traditional, religious, and Haredi Israelis is not built on denial but on shared responsibility." [JerusalemJournal] |
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White House Special Envoy Steve Witkoff hosted trilateral talks in New York on Sunday between senior Israeli and Qatari officials, including Mossad chief David Barnea; the meeting is part of a broader effort to rebuild Israel's relations in the region and make progress on the Abraham Accords… The Trump administration is also looking to broker a meeting between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi, who have not spoken since before the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attacks… Netanyahu, meanwhile, said during a press conference with visiting German Chancellor Friedrich Merz that Israel and Hamas are "very shortly expected" to enter the second phase of the U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement… President Donald Trump tapped architect Shalom Baranes, who as a child emigrated from Italy with his Libyan-born parents to the U.S. through HIAS, to design the new White House ballroom; Baranes previously led the redesign of the Pentagon after the 9/11 attacks, as well as Washington's City Center complex and the Georgetown Ritz-Carlton… Congress released its finalized version of the 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, which includes repeal of sanctions on Syria under the Caesar Civilian Protection Act, as well as repeal of the authorizations for use of military force in Iraq that allowed for the Iraq war and the Gulf War. Those measures are now nearly guaranteed to pass Congress… Sens. Jacky Rosen (D-NV) and Dave McCormick (R-PA), as well as a group of 13 House members led by Rep. Dave Min (D-CA), introduced bills requiring reports on internet freedom in Iran… Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) said in an interview with CBS News' Lesley Stahl that the recent congressional vote on an antisemitism resolution — which she voted against — was "an exercise that they force on Congress" and that "we don't have to get on our knees and [denounce antisemitism] over and over again"; when pressed by Stahl that a majority of legislators backed the resolution, Greene responded, "Most members of Congress take donations from AIPAC and I don't"... New York City Councilmember Chi Ossรฉ dropped his primary challenge to Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY), the House minority leader, after failing to get the backing of the NYC chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America; Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, whom Jeffries endorsed shortly before the November election, had personally lobbied the DSA against backing Ossรฉ's bid… New Jersey Gov.-elect Mikie Sherrill tapped Shlomo Schorr, the legislative director of the New Jersey office of Agudath Israel of America, to serve on her transition team's Interdisciplinary Advisory Task Force… A spokesperson for Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro suggested that Philadelphia's main school district "needs to take very seriously" allegations of antisemitism, amid a congressional probe into the School District of Philadelphia's handling of the issue… PBS and WETA announced an upcoming four-part docuseries examining Black-Jewish relations; Henry Louis Gates Jr. is serving as the executive producer of the series, which will premiere in early February… The Washington Post spotlights GOP megadonor Jeff Yass as he increasingly contributes to candidates backing school voucher programs… eJewishPhilanthropy's Judah Ari Gross reports on the Koum Family Foundation's endowment of the Jan Koum Israel Studies Program at Stanford University, which was announced last month following a three-year pilot program… A Brazilian professor at Harvard Law School who was arrested by immigration authorities last week after he pleaded guilty to illegally shooting an air rifle near a Boston-area synagogue will voluntarily leave the United States… The Real Deal looks at Alex Sapir's dwindling portfolio and financial struggles, as the real estate developer and former owner of 11 Madison Avenue looks to sell off more of his properties following the COVID-19 pandemic and the death of his father, Tamir Sapir, who had owed more than $100 million in taxes… Bloomberg interviews writer Salman Rushdie about his new collection of short stories, The Eleventh Hour, as well as Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts, New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani and the 2022 assassination attempt that left Rushdie with severe injuries… The U.S. deported more than four dozen Iranians as part of the Department of Homeland Security's broader crackdown on illegal immigration… The New York Times considers the "canonization" of Hannah Arendt in the 21st century, as her writings have increasingly been adopted by modern-day political observers and repurposed to address current events… The Wall Street Journal reviews Celeste Marcus' Chaim Soutine: Genius, Obsession, and a Dramatic Life in Art, the first English-language biography of the French Jewish painter, who died in Paris in 1943… A senior law enforcement official in West Midlands, U.K., apologized to the Birmingham Jewish community for having told a committee investigating the banning of Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters from a recent Aston Villa match that members of the Jewish community had supported a ban on the team's fans… Reuters reports on efforts by exiled former Syrian officials, including former intelligence chief Kamal Hassan and a cousin of ousted President Bashar al-Assad, to funnel millions of dollars to militants operating in the country in an effort to stage a revolt challenging the current government led by Ahmad al-Sharaa… Famed architect Frank Gehry, born Frank Owen Goldberg, who has said the curved shape of many of his designs was inspired by the carp his maternal grandmother had in the bathtub as she made gefilte fish, died at 96… |
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Israeli President Isaac Herzog delivered the keynote address at Yeshiva University's 101st annual Hanukkah Dinner on Sunday night in New York City. During his speech, Herzog assailed New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, whom he said "makes no effort to conceal his contempt for the Jewish democratic State of Israel, the only nation-state of the Jewish people." Referencing an event last month outside Manhattan's Park East Synagogue in which a mob of anti-Israel demonstrators protested against a Nefesh B' Nefesh event with chants of "globalize the intifada" and "death to the IDF," Herzog said, "The incoming mayor's response was to suggest that Jews who consider fulfilling [aliyah] are violating international law. In the face of such hatred, we must fight back fiercely and fearlessly." Read the full story from Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen in eJewishPhilanthropy here. |
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ROY ROCHLIN/GETTY IMAGES FOR INTERNATIONAL TENNIS HALL OF FAME |
Tennis player, she won 22 singles titles, in 1968 and 1969 she was ranked No. 2 in the U.S., Julie Heldman turns 80… Founder and CEO of Top Rank, a boxing promotion company based in Las Vegas, Bob Arum turns 94… Film, stage and television actor, composer of film and theater music, John Rubinstein turns 79… Israeli folk singer, lyricist, composer and musical arranger, she has released more than 70 albums sold worldwide, winner of the Kinor David (David's Harp) Prize, Chava Alberstein turns 78… Astrophysicist and senior scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Margaret Geller turns 78… Film director, producer and screenwriter, including box office successes such as "The Parent Trap" and "What Women Want," Nancy Meyers turns 76… Canadian anthropologist and author of four books promoting Mussar, a Jewish ethical movement, Alan Morinis turns 76… Professor of human development at Cornell University, following high-ranking academic positions at the University of Wyoming, Oklahoma State, Tufts and Yale, Robert J. Sternberg turns 76… Writer, photographer and designer, founder of the Honey Sharp Gallery and Ganesh Cafรฉ in the Berkshires, Honey Sharp… Bedford, Texas, resident, Douglas H. Bohannon… Senior executive producer of special events at ABC News until his retirement in early 2025, Marc Burstein… Emmy Award-winning sports commentator and journalist, Roy Firestone turns 72… Chairman of a nationwide insurance brokerage, Bruce P. Gendelman… Author of Toward a Meaningful Life, a book that has sold over 400,000 copies, he is the chairman of the Yiddish English weekly, The Algemeiner Journal, Rabbi Simon Jacobson turns 69… Retired administrative law judge at the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Nadine Lewis turns 68… Rabbi, speaker and musician known as Rav Shmuel, for 21 years he led the Yeshiva program run by the IDT Corporation in Newark, N.J., Shmuel Skaist turns 61… Co-founder of three successful companies, including Office Tiger in 1999, CloudBlue in 2001, and Xometry in 2013, where he is CEO, Randy Altschuler turns 55… Attorney by training but in real life a social media blogger and author, she is the co-founder of TheLi.st, Rachel Sklar turns 53… CEO of Assemble, Aaron Kissel turns 51… Journalist and founder of the newsletter "Popular Information," Judd Legum… President and CEO of the Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles, Aaron Lerner turns 46… Actor and musician, Dov Yosef Tiefenbach turns 44… Actress, comedian and television writer, Joanna "Jo" Firestone turns 39… Co-founder and former chief scientist at OpenAI, in 2024 he co-founded Safe Superintelligence, Ilya Sutskever turns 39… Artist, Sophia Narrett… Venture capitalist in Israel, Alex Oppenheimer… Partner at Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer, Ali Krimmer... |
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