Good Tuesday morning! In today's Daily Kickoff, we look at how New York City Councilmember Julie Menin's potential leadership of the council could impact Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani's policies, and report on the upcoming House Committee vote on designating Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups as terror organizations. We preview today's closely watched special election in Tennessee's 7th Congressional District, and have the exclusive on Rep. Ritchie Torres' new bill to codify the Coast Guard's anti-swastika policy. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Eli Zabar, Marc Rowan, Josh Kushner and Sam Altman. Today's Daily Kickoff was curated by Jewish Insider Executive Editor Melissa Weiss and Israel Editor Tamara Zieve, with assists from Danielle Cohen-Kanik and Marc Rod. Have a tip? Email us here. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.๐ |
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- In Tennessee's 7th Congressional District today, Republican Matt Van Epps and Democrat Aftyn Behn face off in the special election to replace Rep. Mark Green (R-TN), who resigned over the summer. More below.
- In Washington, the Embassy of the United Arab Emirates is holding its annual National Day celebration.
- Elsewhere in Washington, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum is hosting the premiere of "The Last Twins," a documentary about the efforts of Erno "Zvi" Spiegel, a Hungarian Jewish man and prisoner at Auschwitz who protected twins imprisoned at the concentration camp.
- Israel Hayom is holding its first New York summit today in Manhattan. Speakers include the Israeli daily's publisher Dr. Miriam Adelson, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Mike Waltz, outgoing New York City Mayor Eric Adams, U.S. Special Envoy for Hostage Response Adam Boehler, Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA), World Jewish Congress President Ronald Lauder, TWG Global managing partner and former Biden administration senior official Amos Hochstein, the Justice Department's Harmeet Dhillon and former hostages Guy Gilboa Dallal and Evyatar David.
- The Combat Antisemitism Movement is holding its 2025 North American Mayors Summit Against Antisemitism in New Orleans.
- In Miami, Art Basel kicks off today and runs through the weekend.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
Today's special election in Tennessee's 7th Congressional District — covering parts of Nashville, its conservative suburbs and rural counties in middle Tennessee — was expected to be a sleepy affair, given that the district backed President Donald Trump with 60% of the vote in 2024. The state's aggressively partisan redistricting in 2021 was intended to guarantee GOP dominance of the state's congressional delegation, leaving just one Democratic district in Memphis. But in a sign that Trump's growing unpopularity is creating unforeseen problems for Republicans in conservative constituencies, the race between Republican military veteran Matt Van Epps, a former state Cabinet secretary, and Democratic state Rep. Aftyn Behn is highly competitive. The fact that polls show the race tightening — with one Emerson College poll showing Van Epps in a statistical tie with Behn — is a sign of just how treacherous the political landscape has become for Republicans. Gallup's latest survey found Trump with a 36% job approval, close to an all-time low throughout his two terms in office. If Republicans are nervous about holding a seat that Trump won by 22 points, there's a growing likelihood of a blue wave that would give Democrats comfortable control of the House and an outside shot at a Senate majority. (One useful benchmark: Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) carried the 7th District by just two points in her 2018 Senate race, the last election year when Democrats rode a wave to win back the House.) The fact that Republicans are struggling to make the case that the unapologetically progressive Behn holds views out of step with the conservative district on everything from anti-police rhetoric to antipathy towards her home city of Nashville to a record of hostility against Israel is also a sign of how nationalized our politics have become. In today's tribal world, candidate quality and specific policy views mean a lot less than the overall political mood (vibes) and the popularity of the president. Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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IDEOLOGICAL COUNTERWEIGHT |
Likely NYC council speaker Julie Menin on a collision course with Mayor-elect Mamdani |
Julie Menin, a moderate Jewish Democrat from Manhattan who last week declared an early victory in the New York City Council speaker race, is widely expected to serve as an ideological counterweight to the incoming administration of Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani. Some of their biggest clashes could stem from their sharply opposing views on Israel and antisemitism, Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel reports. Diverging approaches: Menin, who would be the council's first Jewish speaker if officially elected in January during an internal vote, is an outspoken supporter of Israel and visited the country on a solidarity trip months after Hamas' Oct. 7, 2023, attacks. For his part, Mamdani, a 34-year-old Queens state assemblyman, has long been a detractor of Israel — whose right to exist as a Jewish state he has refused to recognize. He has indicated that he could move to enact some policies aligning with the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement targeting the Jewish state, even as he has also promised to protect Jewish New Yorkers by calling for a major increase in funding to prevent hate crimes, among other measures. Read the full story here. |
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House Committee to vote on Muslim Brotherhood terrorist designation bill |
Just over a week after the Trump administration announced moves to designate branches of the Muslim Brotherhood as terrorist organizations, the House Foreign Affairs Committee is set to discuss and vote on legislation that aims to classify the entire organization globally as a terrorist group on Wednesday, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Side by side: The bipartisan House legislation, led by Reps. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) and Jared Moskowitz (D-FL), would instruct the Department of State to assess whether each branch of the Muslim Brotherhood operating globally meets the requirements for designation as a terrorist group. It would then use those determinations to designate the Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist group in its entirety. The legislation may go further than the current executive action on the issue, which does not specifically mandate assessments of each Muslim Brotherhood branch and does not directly aim to proscribe the entire Muslim Brotherhood. Read the full story here. |
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Cori Bush poses for picture with influencer who defended Capital Jewish Museum killings |
Former Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO), who is challenging Rep. Wesley Bell (D-MO) to reclaim her former seat in Congress, posed for a photo with Guy Christensen, an anti-Israel influencer who defended the Capital Jewish Museum shooting, in which two Israeli Embassy employees were murdered, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Background: The influencer posted a photo last week from what appears to be a recent American Muslims for Palestine conference — Christensen is wearing an AMP lanyard and speaker badge — alongside a smiling Bush, with the caption "We're coming for you AIPAC." Christensen, on TikTok, lauded Elias Rodriguez, who has been indicted for the D.C. shooting, encouraging his followers to support the alleged gunman, characterizing the shooting as "justified" and an "act of resistance," and urging his followers to respond with "greater resistance and escalation." Read the full story here. |
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Jewish health-care professionals demand action against 'anti-Zionism' in medicine |
Jewish medical practitioners have faced "two years of near-constant abuse and a far longer erosion of professional norms," according to an open letter published this week decrying the reach of anti-Zionist ideology in the medical field. More than 1,000 health-care professionals signed onto the letter, the latest of several similar attempts by Jewish doctors, therapists and nurses to garner attention about the exclusion and harassment that many say they have faced in their fields since the Oct. 7 terror attacks in Israel two years ago, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports. Wider worries: But in this latest missive, its authors and signatories allege that anti-Zionism is a problem unto itself in the medical field — an argument that comes as many people who face accusations of antisemitism defend themselves by saying they are merely opposed to Israel, and not to Jews. The letter marks a rhetorical shift by medical professionals that reflects a broader set of concerns about the influence of anti-Israel ideas in medicine. Anti-Zionism, the letter's authors write, presents a risk not just to Jewish patients but to the medical field's integrity. Read the full story here. |
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Ritchie Torres introduces bill to codify Coast Guard's anti-swastika policy |
Rep. Ritchie Torres (D-NY) on Monday introduced legislation to codify a policy in the Coast Guard prohibiting displays of swastikas and other hate symbols, following backlash last week over a new Coast Guard policy that loosened the previous ban on such displays, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. What it does: Torres' bill would prohibit the Coast Guard from issuing, without congressional approval, "any guidance that is less restrictive on prohibiting divisive or hate symbols and flags" than the updated policy issued following the public backlash, which partially, although not fully, reinstated the previous policy. The new policy states that "divisive or hate symbols and flags are prohibited," including swastikas. Read the full story here. |
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U.N. member states push to eliminate Security Council veto |
Members of the United Nations General Assembly are renewing their push to curb or eliminate the Security Council veto, intensifying concern over whether such a reform would make it easier for the international body to target Israel, Jewish Insider's Matthew Shea reports. Eye on Israel: The "veto initiative," adopted in 2022, requires the General Assembly to convene a debate any time a permanent member of the Security Council — the United States, United Kingdom, France, China or Russia — blocks a resolution. During the war between Israel and Hamas, the Security Council attempted multiple times to pass resolutions calling for an "immediate" and "unconditional" ceasefire in Gaza. The United States often cast the lone veto, arguing the measures were one-sided and would ultimately benefit Hamas. "Anti-Israel bias at the United Nations is pervasive, and the U.S. veto is the only thing standing in the way of the body passing binding resolutions that would pose a danger to the Jewish state," said David May, a senior research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Read the full story here. |
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Target on Their Backs: The New Yorker's Benjamin Wallace-Wells spotlights the rise in political violence targeting U.S. officials on both sides of the aisle, including the Passover firebombing of the Pennsylvania governor's mansion targeting Gov. Josh Shapiro. "[Cody] Balmer had pleaded guilty in mid-October, not just to arson and terrorism but to attempted murder. But Shapiro was still reluctant to focus on his attacker. '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 said. 'But 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. And I think that's true of others who have claimed lives, whether it's [Minnesota] Speaker [Melissa] Hortman's or Charlie Kirk's.'" [NewYorker] Bearing Arms: The Atlantic's Isaac Stanley-Becker reports on Germany's moves to rebuild its offensive military capabilities amid concerns over increased Russian aggression on the Continent and moves by Washington toward neo-isolationism. "[Colonel Dennis] Krรผger told me about traveling to Tel Aviv to fine-tune a missile-defense system purchased from the Israelis that can intercept and destroy long-range ballistic missiles in space. ... For decades, Germany has been a top exporter of arms to Israel, its commitment to the security of the Jewish state a legacy of the Holocaust. Arrow 3, the largest defense deal in Israeli history, reverses that logic by making Israel a guarantor of German safety. Krรผger said that work on the weapons system turned representatives from the two militaries into a 'family,' and that they built camaraderie when his staff waited out missile attacks in Tel Aviv's belowground shelters with their Israeli counterparts. The weapons acquisition from Israel is 'one next step,' Krรผger said, 'in overcoming our history.'" [TheAtlantic] |
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Following a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Donald Trump called on Jerusalem to "maintain a strong and true dialogue with Syria" and warned Israel to avoid scenarios "that will interfere with Syria's evolution into a prosperous State"... U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack, the U.S.' Syria envoy, met in Damascus on Monday with Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa in an effort to calm tensions between Syria and Israel following weekend clashes... Politico looks at concerns among Republican Jewish donors over increasing antisemitism on the right… Sam Altman's OpenAI is taking an ownership stake in Josh Kushner's Thrive Holdings and will integrate its AI tools into Thrive's companies, which were acquired with an eye toward consolidating them and incorporating AI into their processes; Thrive had previously invested billions of dollars in OpenAI… Private equity firm Apax Partners acquired Israeli online marketplace Yad2 for $950 million… Harvard hired a recent divinity school graduate who was filmed in late 2023 assaulting a Jewish student at a "die-in" at the Cambridge campus… The New York Times spotlights Eli Zabar's egg salad sandwich… Israeli filmmaker Rachel Elitzur interviews religious Jewish couples about their first night of marriage in her short documentary "The First Night"... The Norwegian government is struggling to reach a consensus on issues regarding oil drilling and Oslo's sovereign wealth fund's investments in Israel in its draft budget for the coming year ahead of a vote scheduled for Friday… A synagogue and memorial in Rome to a 2-year-old Jewish victim of terror were vandalized earlier this week, drawing condemnations from the city's Jewish community and Italy's foreign minister, who called the vandalism "unacceptable"… Colombia expelled more than two dozen members of the Lev Tahor sect, including 17 children, after a raid on the hotel in which they were staying… Israel's Iron Beam system, which intercepts missiles with lasers, will be delivered to the IDF for initial operational use at the end of the month, Brig.-Gen. (res.) Daniel Gold, head of the Israeli Ministry of Defense Research and Development Directorate, said at the International DefenseTech Summit at Tel Aviv University on Monday, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports… Iran sentenced award-winning filmmaker Jafar Panahi to a year in prison in absentia; Panahi, whose "It Was Just an Accident" won the top prize at the Cannes Film Festival earlier this year, is currently in the U.S. promoting the film… The Sudanese Armed Forces offered Russia a 25-year naval base deal along the East African coast that, if Moscow accepts, would be its first position in Africa… |
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UJA-FEDERATION OF NEW YORK |
Apollo Global Management CEO and UJA-Federation of New York Board Chair Marc Rowan was honored with the Gustave L. Levy Award last night at the 50th UJA-Federation Wall Street Dinner in Manhattan. Referencing New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani's comments regarding the recent protests outside an aliyah event at the Park East Synagogue, Rowan declared Mamdani an "enemy" of the Jewish community, vowing that his organization would "call him out." Read more from eJewishPhilantropy's Nira Dayanim here. |
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BRUNO DE CARVALHO/SOPA IMAGES/LIGHTROCKET VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Actress best known for playing Special Agent Kensi Blye in 277 episodes of CBS' "NCIS Los Angeles," Daniela Ruah turns 42… Former director of the Mossad and then head of the Israeli National Security Council, Efraim Halevy turns 91… Professor of rabbinic literature at Yeshiva University's Gruss Institute in Jerusalem, Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff turns 88… Real estate executive and founder of the Sunshine Group, she was an EVP of The Trump Organization until 1985, Louise Mintz Sunshine turns 85… Sociologist and human rights activist, Jack Nusan Porter turns 81… Partner at Personal Healthcare LLC, Pincus Zagelbaum… Former drummer for a rock band in France followed by a career in contemporary Jewish spiritual music in Brooklyn, Isaac "Jacky" Bitton turns 78… EVP at Rubenstein Communications, Nancy Haberman… Author of more than 15 volumes of poetry, he is a professor emeritus of English at the University of Pennsylvania, Bob Perelman turns 78… French historian, professor at Sorbonne Paris North University and author of 30 books on the history of North Africa, Benjamin Stora turns 75… Retired associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, Barbara A. Lenk turns 75… Professor emerita at Montana State University, she was a member of the Montana House of Representatives and a board member of Bozeman's Congregation Beth Shalom, Dr. Franke Wilmer turns 75… Canadian fashion designer and entrepreneur, he is best known for launching the Club Monaco and Joe Fresh brands, Joe Mimran turns 73… Partner in the Madison, Wis., law firm of Miner, Barnhill & Galland, she is a class action and labor law attorney, Sarah Siskind… Rabbi of Baltimore's Congregation Ohel Moshe, Rabbi Zvi Teichman… Celebrity physician and author of diet books, he is the president of the Nutritional Research Foundation, Joel Fuhrman turns 72… Advertising account executive at the Los Angeles Daily Journal Corporation, Lanna Solnit… Cleveland resident, Joseph Schlaiser… Emmy Award-winning actress, Rena Sofer turns 57… Publisher and CEO of The Forward, Rachel Fishman Feddersen… Identical twin sisters, known as The AstroTwins, they are magazine columnists and authors of four books on astrology, Tali Edut and Ophira Edut turn 53… Lecturer of political science at Yale, she was formerly a White House staffer, Eleanor L. Schiff turns 49… Television writer and producer, Murray Selig Miller turns 49… Former member of the Knesset and then Israel's ambassador to the U.K., Tzipi Hotovely turns 47… Director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies' Center on Cyber and Technology Innovation, Annie Fixler… Managing director with Alvarez & Marsal in Atlanta, she was a sabre fencer at the 2004 Summer Olympics, Emily Jacobson Edwards turns 40… Actor, best known for playing Trevor in the coming-of-age film "Eighth Grade," Fred Hechinger turns 26... |
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