Good Friday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we look at The New Yorker staff writer Isaac Chotiner’s recent fixation on Israel and combative approach to those he interviews on the subject, and consider what a potential primary challenge against Rep. Dan Goldman from NYC Comptroller Brad Lander signals for pro-Israel Democrats. We cover concerns by Amir Hayek, Israel’s former envoy to the UAE, over the future of the Abraham Accords, and report on a recent delegation of New York police chiefs to Israel. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Ashley Hinson, David Halbfinger and Elizabeth Tsurkov.
Today’s Daily Kickoff was curated by Jewish Insider Executive Editor Melissa Weiss and Israel Editor Tamara Zieve, with assists from Gabby Deutch, Marc Rod and Danielle Cohen-Kanik. Have a tip? Email us here.
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For less-distracted reading over the weekend, browse this week’s edition of The Weekly Print, a curated print-friendly PDF featuring a selection of recent Jewish Insider and eJewishPhilanthropy stories, including: ‘We won’t normalize it’: Friends of Ziv and Gali Berman mark twins’ 28th birthday in Hamas captivity; Charlie Kirk remembered as a bulwark against antisemitism on the right; and In new book, former Obama speechwriter calls on Jews to stand proud for their values. Print the latest edition here.
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- President Donald Trump will be interviewed on “Fox & Friends” today at 8 a.m. ET.
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This evening, the president and special envoy Steve Witkoff are slated to meet with Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani, who arrived in the U.S. days after an Israeli strike in Doha killed several senior Hamas officials. Al-Thani is scheduled to meet this morning with Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington.
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The U.N. General Assembly is set to vote today on a resolution calling for a two-state solution, the release of the remaining hostages and an end to Hamas’ rule in Gaza.
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In Sacramento, Calif., we’re keeping an eye on amended legislation targeting antisemitism in K-12 schools that passed out of committee earlier this week. The bill, AB 715, still needs to pass through both chambers today, the last day of session, before heading to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk. The bill’s passage had been stalled amid pushback from the California Teachers Association and anti-Israel groups. Read more from JI’s Gabby Deutch on the legislation.
- On Sunday, the Capital Jewish Museum is holding its annual gala in Washington. This year’s event will honor Carlyle Group Chairman David Rubenstein and Esther Safran Foer.
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In Israel on Sunday, Pershing Square’s Bill Ackman and his wife, technologist Neri Oxman, will each receive honorary degrees from the University of Haifa at a gala dinner. Earlier in the day, Oxman and Ackman will deliver “master classes” on “material ecology and computational design” and leadership, respectively.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
We’re well into September, and the state of play in the New York City mayoral race hasn’t changed much in the last couple months, despite the many eye-catching developments. But a new New York Times/Siena poll released this week showcases an in-depth picture of the city’s electorate — one that is clearly wary of Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani’s brand of socialism, even as he remains the clear favorite to become the next mayor.
As has always been the case, the divided field of Mamdani opponents is the far-left candidate's biggest asset. Mamdani leads former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo by 15 points among registered voters, 41-26%, with all the candidates on the ballot. But in a head-to-head matchup, Cuomo pulls narrowly ahead, 46-45%.
The results continue to underscore how the splintered field is the biggest reason Mamdani is favored. Hardly any of the supporters of Mayor Eric Adams, running as an independent, or Republican nominee Curtis Sliwa would support Mamdani over Cuomo if their candidate dropped out. Indeed, among those not supporting Mamdani, over half (52%) said they would never support him for mayor — higher than any other candidate.
Working in Mamdani’s favor is the relatively respectable favorability rating he holds with New York City voters, especially in comparison to his rivals. Nearly half (49%) of respondents viewed Mamdani favorably, with only 35% viewing him unfavorably. That means that despite holding a record far to the left of past New York City mayors, many voters aren’t (yet) holding that against him. But there’s been no significant outside advertising effort against Mamdani, as you would typically expect in the run-up to a high-stakes contest.
Without any effort to remind voters about his far-left record, it’s no surprise that the fresh-faced political newcomer has a respectable image. Cuomo, on the other hand, has an underwater favorability rating, with 42% viewing him favorably and 51% viewing him unfavorably — largely a result of the ethical scandal he faced that forced him to resign as governor. But on the issues, it’s easy to see how Cuomo remains competitive in a one-on-one matchup. Crime is the top issue for New York City voters, with 26% naming it as the most important problem facing voters, slightly ahead of affordability at 24%. One of Mamdani’s biggest vulnerabilities is his long record of public comments supporting defunding the police and others critical of the NYPD.
Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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Isaac Chotiner, The New Yorker’s interrogator out to trip up Israel supporters |
As The New Yorker refrains from addressing its controversial decision to invite an antisemitic speaker to join its upcoming festival, the magazine has otherwise exhibited a notably hostile emphasis on Israel and related issues over the past few months. Isaac Chotiner, a staff writer for The New Yorker well-known for conducting blunt and aggressive Q&As on a variety of news-related topics, has recently been fixated on Israel — focusing almost exclusively on the subject in what have often been combative interviews with defenders of Israel who span the political spectrum, Jewish Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports.
Israel focus: From late July to late August, Chotiner published six consecutive interviews concerning Israel, and conducted nearly a dozen more over the preceding three-month period. His two most recent interviews on the subject featured particularly contentious discussions with Jack Lew, former U.S. ambassador to Israel during the Biden administration, and Norman
J.W. Goda, a professor of Holocaust studies at the University of Florida. Speaking with Lew last month, Chotiner repeatedly challenged the Biden administration’s approach to Israel’s war in Gaza — using a relentlessly skeptical tone that the interviewer has not shown in his questioning of anti-Israel interlocutors.
Read the full story here. |
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Dan Goldman’s primary emerging as bellwether for the staying power of pro-Israel Democrats |
A new poll commissioned by a left-wing advocacy group is raising hopes among progressive activists eager to enlist a challenger to take on Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY), a pro-Israel Democrat whose House district leans heavily to the left, in next year’s June primary election. The poll, released this week by Demand Progress Action, shows Brad Lander, the New York City comptroller, leading by 19 points in a hypothetical head-to-head matchup with Goldman, who wins just 33% of the vote. Lander, who served as a longtime city councilman in the district, claims 52% among likely Democratic primary voters, while also boasting a higher favorability rating, according to the poll, Jewish
Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports.
Looking at Lander: While the survey was meant to coax Lander into entering the primary, it remains unclear if he has the appetite to compete in what would likely be a bitter race for the seat covering Lower Manhattan and a swath of Brooklyn, including such progressive enclaves as Park Slope. Lander, a well-known progressive who has not explicitly ruled out a congressional bid after losing in the New York City mayoral primary, is more widely expected to accept a senior role in a potential administration of Zohran Mamdani, the
far-left Democratic nominee for mayor whose upset in June lent renewed energy to progressive activists who have eyed challenges to several mainstream House Democrats in New York City. Still, Lander had been looking at Goldman’s seat since before the primary concluded, according to a political consultant familiar with the situation, who suggested the city comptroller could be “serious” about a campaign.
Read the full story here. |
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Ex-Israeli ambassador to UAE sounds alarm on future of Abraham Accords |
Israel’s first ambassador to the United Arab Emirates said on Thursday that he is “very, very worried” about the future of the Abraham Accords, as Israel’s ties in the Gulf are coming under strain following an Israeli attack on Hamas leaders in Qatar earlier this week, Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch reports.
What he said: “For the last week, I am almost not sleeping. I’m very, very worried,” Amir Hayek said at a webinar hosted by The Washington Institute for Near East Policy marking the five-year anniversary of the signing of the Accords, when Israel normalized ties with the UAE. “I believe that Israel should look at our partners as partners, and talk to them, and not let this situation and the Abraham Accords collapse,” said Hayek, who was ambassador to the UAE from 2021 to 2024. “I think that it will be very hard to rebuild the Abraham Accords if we will pass a point of breaking them, even if we think that we can do it for a few months. No. No. We need to do everything to protect the Abraham Accords.”
Read the full story here.
Envoy called: The United Arab Emirates summoned Israeli Ambassador Yossi Shelley earlier today over the strike in Doha. |
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DMFI suggests Trump foiled Israel’s Doha attack by tipping off Qatar to impending strike |
Democratic Majority for Israel suggested in a new searing statement that the Trump administration’s warning to Qatar about the impending Israeli attack in Doha earlier this week may have foiled the effort. The Democratic pro-Israel group is taking a different approach to the strike than most Democratic lawmakers, who have been highly critical of the operation, with few exceptions, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod reports.
The accusation: “After years of criticizing Democrats — despite our party’s 75-year history of supporting Israel — President Donald Trump yesterday broke with our vital ally in an unprecedented manner,” DMFI CEO Brian Romick said in a statement. “He even went as far as to direct his special envoy to alert Qatar, and in so doing risked alerting Hamas, about the attack,” Romick said. “The White House must answer whether their pre-warning of the attack in any way compromised Israel’s ability to eliminate Hamas’ terrorist leadership.”
Read the full story here. |
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Ashley Hinson emerges as odds-on favorite to succeed Ernst in the Senate |
Rep. Ashley Hinson (R-IA) has emerged as the front-runner in the contest to replace retiring Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA), with national Republicans swiftly coalescing around her bid for the GOP nomination as they look to avoid a messy primary battle. Hinson, a politically tested lawmaker who has long been viewed as a potential successor to Ernst, launched her Senate campaign within hours of Ernst’s announcement last Tuesday that she would not seek a third term, Jewish Insider’s Emily Jacobs reports. Hinson, in her candidate announcement, said that she would be President Donald Trump’s “strongest ally” in the Senate and would work to “deliver the America
First agenda.” She also praised Ernst for her military service and time in public office, saying that, “Our country and state are better off because of Joni’s selfless service.”
Swift support: Hinson, a prolific fundraiser who entered the race with a $2.8 million war chest, began racking up endorsements shortly after her campaign launch. Trump endorsed Hinson on Friday, as did Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) and Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC), chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, Senate Republicans’ campaign arm. Trump described Hinson as “a wonderful person” whom he knows “well,” and praised her devotion to her family before touting her commitment to “our incredible Iowa workers.”
Read the full story here. |
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New York police chiefs visit Israel for counterterrorism, antisemitism training |
A delegation of 13 senior police officials from the New York area returned to the U.S. on Friday fresh off an intensive week in Israel designed to increase their counterterrorism training and understanding of antisemitism. Organized by Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora and Combating Antisemitism, along with U.S. Jewish security groups Community Security Initiative and Community Security Service, the trip included a tour of Mabat 2000, the visual surveillance system deployed by Israel Police and visits to the Nova music festival massacre site and several kibbutzim attacked on Oct. 7, 2023, Jewish Insider’s Haley Cohen reports.
Gaining insight: “These are all things that these police commissioners will all relate to,” said Mitch Silber, executive director of CSI. “This trip has enhanced my understanding of Jewish culture, enabled me to observe firsthand the challenges Israeli law enforcement faces and will help us better protect the Jewish community and the county as a whole,” Kevin Catalina, the police commissioner of Suffolk County on Long Island, told JI. “The knowledge and experience gained during this trip will no doubt prove invaluable.”
Read the full story here. |
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Violent Streak: The New York Times’ David French reflects on the assassination this week of commentator Charlie Kirk. “When I speak on college campuses, I’m often asked what single thing worries me most about American politics and culture. I have an easy answer — it’s hatred. Even vast political differences can be managed when people acknowledge the humanity and dignity of their opponents. At the same time, however, small conflicts can spiral into big ones when hatred and vengeance take away our eyes and ears. Every threat, every assault, every shooting, every murder — and certainly every political assassination — builds the momentum of hate and fear. … Assassination can cost us our country. We lose it when we stop seeing our opponents as human, when we crave vengeance more than peace, when the motivation for our political engagement stops being the common good of our constitutional Republic (or even just the security of our
families), but is rather inflicting pain and anguish on our political enemies.” [NYTimes]
9/11 Reconsidered: The Free Press’ Niall Ferguson considers the evolution of his views about the Sept. 11 attacks, which he now sees as a clash of civilizations rather than a confluence of historical trend lines. “Over the past 24 years, I have valiantly tried to see 9/11 differently—not as a civilizational clash between Islam and ‘the West’ but as something that fit better into my own secular frame of reference. Raised an atheist, trained as an economic historian, I felt obliged to look behind what I took to be the facade of religious zealotry. … In short, comparing the world today with that of 24 years ago, I am tempted to say that bin Laden lost the war on terror but is winning the clash of civilizations. That’s not to say his particular brand of Salafist jihadism is winning; it can even be argued that it’s in decline. Bin Laden’s creed was always too uncompromising to form alliances of convenience. By contrast, the
pro-Palestinian ‘global intifada’ is much more omnivorous, and can easily absorb the old left (Marxism and pan-Arabism) and the new (anti-globalism and wokeism).” [FreePress]
Blowing Up Assumptions: In The Wall Street Journal, Reuel Marc Gerecht and Ray Takeyh posit that the outcome of the 12-day war between Israel and Iran and U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities is markedly different than previous presidential administrations had warned. “This isn’t how many American officials expected the Islamic Republic to behave after being bombed. When selling his Iran nuclear deal, President Barack Obama dismissed those who thought that ‘surgical strikes against Iran’s facilities will be quick and painless.’ His deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes was more damning. ‘The default view in Washington is that if there’s a challenge in the Middle East, the U.S. has to solve it,’ he said. ‘Our basic point has been, no, sorry, we learned the opposite lesson from Iraq. It’s not that more U.S. military engagement will stabilize the Middle East. It’s that we can’t do this.’ … However much Americans
incorrectly forecast the war’s results, the shock in Iran—the failure of strategic imagination—was far worse.” [WSJ]
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The U.S. joined the rest of the U.N. Security Council in signing onto a statement condemning Israel for its attack on Hamas officials in Qatar earlier this week…
President Donald Trump said he will posthumously award Charlie Kirk with the Presidential Medal of Freedom…
The Pentagon announced its approval of a $14.2 million aid package to Lebanon to assist Beirut in disarming Hezbollah…
Rep. Becca Balint (D-VT) accused House Republicans of having an “antisemitism problem” after Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC) said in a social media post directed at Rep. Sara Jacobs (D-CA), who had just given a speech arguing that plastic surgery is “gender affirming care,” that she has “a good surgeon if you ever want to get your nose done”...
The House Foreign Affairs Committee released a series of bills aimed at reorganizing and reforming the State Department, ahead of a committee meeting next week where the lawmakers are expected to debate a host of amendments related to foreign policy and national security issues across the globe, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod reports… New York City Mayor Eric Adams signaled in a meeting with business leaders this week that he is open to dropping his reelection bid if he does not see a credible pathway to victory over front-runner Zohran Mamdani…
Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg met with Mamdani on Thursday; Bloomberg had spent upward of $8 million opposing Mamdani’s primary bid earlier this year…
Mamdani said he would apologize for social media comments he made in 2020 calling the NYPD “racist, anti-queer & a major threat to public safety”...
Josh Kraft dropped his Boston mayoral bid after a preliminary election showed him trailing incumbent Mayor Michelle Wu by 49 points…
Nadine Menendez, who earlier this year was convicted for her role in a corruption scheme involving her husband, former Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ), was sentenced to 4 1/2 years in prison…
The University of California, Berkeley submitted to the Trump administration more than 150 names of students and faculty with “potential connection[s]” to antisemitic activity…
A Queens College Zoom lecture featuring an Israeli academic was disrupted by some attendees shouting antisemitic threats and displaying violent and sexually explicit images…
Amazon suspended a Seattle-based engineer who criticized the company’s business ties to Israel…
Paramount Skydance is reportedly moving toward making a majority cash bid for Warner Bros. Discovery that would merge the parent companies of HBO Max and Paramount+…
Jon Kelly’s Puck news company is finalizing an agreement to acquire Graydon Carter’s Air Mail…
An Iranian man living under a new identity in Central Florida is facing a $225 million lawsuit from three former political prisoners who allege the 89-year-old served as the head of the secret police during the reign of the shah of Iran before he was deposed in 1978…
Jewish Voice for Peace is suing the City of Miami Beach as well as its mayor and a city commissioner, alleging that the group’s First Amendment rights were violated by the passage of an ordinance on public protests…
The Mount Kisco [N.Y.] Recreation Commission reversed its denial of a permit to Chabad of Bedford to use a town park for the annual tashlich ceremony; the town originally cited a ban on the use of parks for religious purposes…
Relatives of Raphael Lemkin, a writer and lawyer who coined the term “genocide,” are pushing the Pennsylvania-based Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention, which accused Israel of genocide 10 days after Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, to stop using his name, eJewishPhilanthropy’s Nira Dayanim reports… Ireland’s public broadcaster said the country will opt out of the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest if Israel is permitted to participate…
Dutch Foreign Minister David van Weel told the country’s parliament that the government plans to implement a boycott of products from Jewish settlements in the West Bank…
Former English soccer player and BBC “Match of the Day” presenter Gary Lineker won the U.K. National Television Awards’ prize for best TV presenter, months after he left the broadcaster amid widespread criticism over his sharing of a social media post that compared Zionists to rats… Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed off on a plan to move forward on a proposed E1 settlement expansion plan that would cut through the West Bank…
Two people were injured in a stabbing attack at a kibbutz hotel outside of Jerusalem...
Russian-Israeli researcher Elizabeth Tsurkov was reunited with family in Israel, days after being freed by an Iran-backed Iraqi militia that kidnapped her in Baghdad more than two years ago…
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said that Tehran and Paris were nearing a prisoner exchange that would release detained French nationals in exchange for an Iranian woman who was arrested in France earlier this year on charges of promoting terrorism online… Senior officials in Jordan warned that Iran is increasingly posing a security threat in the Hashemite Kingdom…
David Halbfinger, who served as New York Times bureau chief in Jerusalem from 2017-2021, is returning to the role following the departure of Patrick Kingsley; longtime NYT correspondent Isabel Kershner was promoted to senior correspondent for the bureau… |
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Israeli President Isaac Herzog (left) met on Thursday with U.K. Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis in London during Herzog's trip to the country, where he met with Jewish leaders as well as Prime Minister Keir Starmer. |
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TOM WILLIAMS/ROLL CALL/GETTY IMAGES |
President emeritus of the Democratic Majority for Israel, Mark S. Mellman turns 70...
FRIDAY: 2020 Nobel Prize laureate in medicine, Harvey James Alter turns 90... Chairman at Waxman Strategies, he served for 20 terms through 2015 as a Democratic congressman from Los Angeles, Henry Waxman turns 86... 2017 Nobel Prize laureate in economics, University of Chicago behavioral economist, Richard H. Thaler turns 80... Director of Intergovernmental Affairs in the Obama White House, he
was previously lieutenant governor of Kentucky and mayor of Louisville for 20 years, Jerry Abramson turns 79... Former president of AIPAC, Amy Rothschild Friedkin... Denver Jewish community leader, Sunny Brownstein... U.S. ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom during the Trump 45 administration, he was governor of Kansas and a U.S. senator, Sam Brownback turns 69... Miami-based chairman of
American Principles Super PAC, Eytan Laor... Former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, he is now the global chair of the litigation department at Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, Geoffrey Steven Berman turns 66... SVP of government and public affairs at CVS Health, Melissa Schulman... Internet
entrepreneur and a pioneer of VoIP telephony, Jeff Pulver turns 63... Chair of ADL's Board of Directors, Nicole G. Mutchnik... Attorney specializing in the recovery of looted artworks during the Holocaust and featured in the 2015 film "Woman in Gold," E. Randol (Randy) Schoenberg turns 59... Senior
paralegal and contract manager at The St. Joe Company, Sherri Jankowski... Senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Max A. Boot turns 56... Screenwriter, producer and director, he won three Emmy Awards for episodes of “Robot Chicken,” Douglas Goldstein turns 54... Chief advocacy officer at the Defense Credit Union Council, Jason Stverak... Israeli singer, songwriter and musician, Idan Raichel turns 48... Founder of the Loewy Law Firm in Austin, Texas, Adam Loewy... Venture capitalist and one of the co-founders of Palantir Technologies, Joe Lonsdale turns 43... AIPAC's area director for Philadelphia and South Jersey, Kelly Lauren Stein... Actress, director and singer, she directed and starred in the 2022 Peacock miniseries “Angelyne,” Emmanuelle Grey "Emmy" Rossum turns 39... Former advisor to the prime minister of Israel for foreign affairs and world communities, now a venture capitalist, Sara Greenberg... Manager of operations communications at American Airlines, Ethan Klapper... National political correspondent at Politico and the author of The Bidens: Inside the First Family’s Fifty-Year Rise to Power, Ben Schreckinger... Product manager for pixel watch at Google, Natalie Raps Farren... Film and television actress, Molly Tarlov turns 33…
SATURDAY: Retired motion picture editor, Avrum Fine... Columnist, author and etiquette authority known as Miss Manners, Judith Perlman Martin turns 87... Chairman of global brokerage at CBRE, a worldwide commercial real estate services company, Stephen Siegel turns 81... Folk artist, photographer and writer focused on European Jewish history, Jill Culiner turns 80... Retired after 57 years as a D.C. reporter for many print and broadcast media, he now writes a Substack focused on antisemitism and the Middle East, Richard Pollock... Ice dancer, who, with her partner Michael Seibert, won five straight U.S. Figure Skating Championships between 1981 and 1985, Judy Blumberg turns 68... Former executive director of the Maryland/Israel Development Center, Barry Bogage turns 68… Founding director of The David S. Wyman Institute for Holocaust Studies, he is the author of 16 books, Rafael Medoff turns 66... Executive director of Aspen Digital, part of the Aspen Institute, Vivian Schiller... Senior lecturer in Talmud
at Ner Israel Rabbinical College, Rabbi Chaim Kosman... Comedian known as "Roastmaster General" for his Comedy Central celebrity roasts, Jeffrey Ross Lifschultz turns 60... Governor of North Carolina, one of three Jewish governors named Josh, Joshua Stein turns 59... Member of the Los Angeles City Council, Robert J. Blumenfield turns 58... Founder of United Hatzalah of Israel and president of its U.S.-based support organization, Friends of United Hatzalah, Eli Beer turns 52... Israel's minister of health until this past July, he is a member of the Knesset for the Shas party, Uriel Menachem Buso turns 52... VP of state and local advocacy for the Anti-Defamation League, Meredith Mirman Weisel... Former nine-year member of the Colorado House of Representatives, Jonathan Singer turns 46... Advocacy strategist with experience in opinion research, Gary Ritterstein... Senior editor and elections analyst at the Cook Political Report focused on the U.S. House of Representatives and redistricting, David Nathan Wasserman turns 41... Founder and president of Reshet Capital, Betty Grinstein... Director at Finsbury Glover Hering, Walter Suskind... Policy associate at Hadassah, the Women’s Zionist Organization of America, Sierra DeCrosta... Senior
software engineer at Capital Connect by J.P. Morgan Chase, David Behmoaras... Managing director at Page Four Media, Noa Silverstein…
SUNDAY: Actor, writer and director, first known for his role as Chekov in the original “Star Trek” television series, Walter Koenig turns 89... The only basketball head coach to have won both an NCAA national championship and an NBA championship, Lawrence Harvey (Larry) Brown turns 85... Executive chairman of MDC Holdings (parent company to Richmond American Homes) until last December, and the principal supporter of the Museum of Tolerance Jerusalem, Larry A. Mizel turns 83... San Diego-based attorney, a specialist in mass torts, Frederick A. Schenk turns 72... Mayor of Miami-Dade County, Daniella Levine Cava turns 70... Born in Chicago as Robert Francis Prevost, Pope Leo XIV turns 70... Plastic surgeon and television personality, Dr. Terry Dubrow turns 67... Chairman and chief investment officer of The Electrum Group, he is the world's largest private collector of Rembrandt's works, Thomas Scott Kaplan turns 63... Founder of Mindchat Research, Amy Kauffman... Founder of Vermont-based Kidrobot, a retailer of art toys, apparel and accessories, and Ello, an ad-free social network, Paul Budnitz turns 58... British secretary of state for defence until 2024 and knighted earlier this year, he was a national president of BBYO, Sir Grant Shapps turns 57... President of Strauss Media Strategies, during the Clinton administration he became the first-ever White House Radio Director, Richard Strauss turns 56... Associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Ketanji Brown Jackson turns 55... Managing director at Gasthalter & Co., he is a past president of the Young Israel of New Rochelle, Mark A. Semer... Comedian, television actor, writer and producer, Elon Gold turns 55... Managing partner of Berke Farah LLP, his clients include SCOTUS Justice Clarence Thomas, Elliot S. Berke... Senior White House reporter for CBS News, Jennifer Jacobs... CEO of San Francisco-based Jewish LearningWorks, Dana Sheanin... Senior booking producer at CNN's
Inside Politics with Dana Bash, Courtney Cohen Flantzer... Governor of Florida and former 2024 POTUS candidate, Ron DeSantis turns 47... Israeli-American actress, Hani Furstenberg turns 46... Artist, photographer and educator, Marisa Scheinfeld turns 45... Staff writer at The Atlantic since 2014, Russell Berman... Co-founder and co-executive director of the Indivisible movement, Leah Greenberg... Los Angeles based attorney working as a contracts supervisor at MarketCast, Roxana Pourshalimi... New York
Times reporter since 2011, now focused on in-depth profiles, Matt Flegenheimer... EVP at Voyager Global Mobility, Jeremy Moskowitz... Founder and owner of ARA Capital, a British firm with holdings in e-commerce and energy, Arkadiy Abramovich turns 32... MSW graduate this past May at Yeshiva University, Julia Savel... Artistic gymnast, she represented Israel at the 2020 (Tokyo) and 2024 (Paris) Summer Olympics, Lihie Raz turns 22...
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