Good Tuesday morning!
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we report on Vice President JD Vance’s trip to Israel, which began today, and talk to Jewish communal leaders in the U.K. about security concerns following the deadly Yom Kippur attack on a Manchester synagogue. We report on an antisemitic comment made at a campaign event by New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli’s Muslim affairs advisor, and cover the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ lawsuit against Northwestern University over the school’s requirement that students watch an antisemitism training video. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Sheila Katz, Jodi Kantor and James Snyder.
Today’s Daily Kickoff was curated by Jewish Insider Executive Editor Melissa Weiss and Israel Editor Tamara Zieve with assists from Matthew Kassel and Danielle Cohen-Kanik. Have a tip? Email us here.
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- Vice President JD Vance is in Israel today, where he joins White House Senior Advisor Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, who arrived earlier this week. More below.
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In Washington this afternoon, the Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control is holding a hearing on Hezbollah’s drug trafficking networks in Latin America. The Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Matthew Levitt, the Atlantic Council’s Amb. Nathan Sales, the Hudson Institute’s Marshall Billingslea and former FBI official Robert Clifford are slated to testify.
- In New York, Hillel International CEO Adam Lehman will sit in conversation with 92NY’s Rabbi David Ingber to discuss Judaism and Jewish life on college campuses.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S MATTHEW KASSEL |
In previous mayoral elections in New York City, a candidate’s meeting with a controversial imam who was listed as an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing — and who has stridently opposed homosexuality and condemned America as “filthy” and “sick,” among other extreme remarks — might be expected to meaningfully dent support for his campaign.
But even as Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic nominee, has drawn criticism over his recent meeting with Siraj Wahhaj, a Brooklyn imam who leads Masjid at-Taqwa in Bedford-Stuyvesant, political experts say that such backlash is unlikely to influence the outcome of the Nov. 4 election.
That Mamdani, a 34-year-old democratic socialist and Queens state assemblyman, appears poised to withstand scrutiny over his relationship with Wahhaj, which he has defended, underscores how dramatically the political environment has changed in New York City — where the emotional resonance of the 9/11 terror attacks have long played a central role in campaigns and elections.
“Dead cops and firefighters don’t seem to matter much these days,” Hank Sheinkopf, a Democratic consultant who is leading an anti-Mamdani super PAC, told Jewish Insider on Monday. “I think it’s a generational question,” he added, noting that “the people who are voting for” Mamdani “weren’t even born on Sept. 11.”
While he said that Mamdani’s meeting “isn’t helpful” and could ultimately push some voters concerned about public safety to instead back one of his rivals — including the Republican nominee, Curtis Sliwa, or former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, running on an independent line — “the question is whether they can generate a vote,” according to Sheinkopf.
“That’s not clear yet,” he explained, saying the controversy could be “buried under” Mamdani’s continued focus on affordability, which helped drive his upset over Cuomo in the Democratic primary in June.
Both Cuomo and Sliwa have attacked Mamdani for the meeting, with the former governor zeroing in on Wahhaj’s history of homophobic comments — including remarks in which the imam called homosexuality “a disease.”
Mamdani, who would be the first Muslim mayor of New York City if elected, has dismissed criticism of his Friday meeting with Wahhaj — whom he praised as “one of the nation’s foremost Muslim leaders and a pillar of the Bed-Stuy community for nearly half a century.”
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Vance takes center stage in Trump effort to keep Gaza ceasefire on track |
Vice President JD Vance landed in Israel on Tuesday with the charge to lead efforts to stabilize the fragile ceasefire in Gaza and assist in the implementation of the second phase of President Donald Trump’s peace deal, Jewish Insider’s Washington reporter Matthew Shea reports. The vice president will now step into the conflict, visiting Israel at an important juncture as the Trump administration looks to avoid another breakdown into renewed hostilities and ensure full compliance with the deal. "Hamas is going to fire on Israel. Israel's going to have to respond, of course. There are going to be moments where you have people within Gaza that you're [not] quite sure
what they're actually doing. But we think it has the best chance for sustainable peace," Vance told reporters on Sunday, referring to the peace proposal.
Continuous engagement: The decision to dispatch Vance to Israel is a sign of the Trump administration’s continued engagement in the Middle East after securing the hostage-release deal, according to experts. “We are in a moment of really intense American engagement and influence that have got us to a stage one that no analyst a month ago would have told you was possible, and so there is a moment of opportunity here,” said John Hannah, a senior fellow at the Jewish Institute for National Security of America. “In order to be sustained, it’s a ceasefire and peace process that is going to require intense and continuous U.S. engagement at the most senior levels.”
Read the full story here. |
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Britain’s Jewish community wants actions, not words, after Manchester synagogue attack |
Since the terrorist attack on a Manchester, England, synagogue on Yom Kippur that left two congregants dead, British politicians have redoubled their efforts to reassure the country’s Jewish community, which has been increasingly concerned about security issues amid widespread anti-Israel sentiment that has grown in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas terror attacks and ensuing war in Gaza. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer promised to do “everything” in his power to protect the Jewish community, including the recent approval of £10 million ($13 million) in emergency funds to provide greater security. But while the added financial resources for more guards and extra security has been welcomed by the U.K.’s Jewish community, there remains considerable unease and hostility toward the government, something that became starkly apparent the day after Yom Kippur, Lianne Kolirin reports from London for Jewish Insider.
Hostile reception: When David Lammy, the country’s deputy prime minister, attended a vigil close to Heaton Park synagogue the day after the attack, he was booed and heckled with cries of “Shame on you” and “Blood on your hands.” Lammy was foreign secretary when Britain said it intended to recognize a Palestinian state earlier this year. The move was formally announced by Starmer last month, alongside similar action taken by countries including France, Australia and Canada. In his previous role, Lammy imposed restrictions on British arms sales to Israel and twice summoned Israel’s ambassador to the U.K. to criticize him over Israel’s handling of the Gaza war. Lammy and his parliamentary colleagues have also been criticized by the Jewish community for not doing enough to protect them by allowing hostile anti-Israel marches to proceed week after week in British cities. “What David Lammy and his government have done has allowed this to happen,”
Melanie, who asked only to be identified by her first name, told JI. The 42-year-old nurse, who was among those who booed Lammy, attended the vigil with her husband and three children, all of whom attend a Jewish school close to the targeted synagogue.
Read the full story here. |
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Jack Ciattarelli Muslim affairs advisor bragged at campaign event that he doesn’t take money from Jews |
Ibrar Nadeem, a Muslim affairs advisor to New Jersey gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli, bragged that he wasn’t taking money from Jews at a campaign event last weekend organized by a group called Muslims 4 Jack. Ciattarelli, the Republican nominee, appeared alongside Nadeem on Saturday evening at the event, held in Piscataway, N.J, where he called Nadeem one of his closest advisors. At the event, Nadeem alleged some Muslims in his community had accused him of “taking money from Jews” to support Ciattarelli, which he pointedly denied, Jewish Insider’s Emily Jacobs reports.
What he said: An invitation to the event, which described the gathering as a “community dinner honoring” the GOP gubernatorial hopeful, listed Nadeem’s official title as “executive director” of “New Jersey - Muslim relations.” Nadeem told the crowd, “Every time I got tired, people from my community — when I was blamed that — somebody said ‘You are taking money from Jews.’ I said, ‘I check my bank account every day, brother, it is not there.’”
Read the full story here. |
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CAIR files Title VI lawsuit against Northwestern over antisemitism training video |
A new lawsuit filed by the Council on American-Islamic Relations’ Chicago branch last week alleges that Northwestern University violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by adopting time, place and manner restrictions on student protest and requiring students to watch an antisemitism training video. The plaintiffs include Northwestern Graduate Workers for Palestine, a doctoral student who “is not Arab, Jewish, or Muslim, but publicly associates with these students” and a doctoral candidate of Syrian and Palestinian descent, Jewish Insider’s Danielle Cohen-Kanik reports.
CAIR’s claims: Title VI prohibits institutions that receive federal funding from discriminating based on a person’s race, color and national origin — understood to include both Arabs and Jews — though the lawsuit claims that “Antizionist Jews are also a cognizable ethnic group” under the statute. The suit also accuses the Chicago-area school of violating Title VI by discriminating against those who “associate with” Jewish and Arab students “who oppose or criticize Zionism.” The suit, filed in federal court in Illinois, claims Northwestern violated students’ rights by requiring them to agree to the school’s code of conduct, which now incorporates the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s working definition of antisemitism, as well as mandatory bias training that includes a video on antisemitism created in collaboration with the Jewish United Fund, the city’s Jewish federation.
Read the full story here. |
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A 21-year-old from rural Argentina travels 5,000 miles to learn — and teach — tolerance |
Until this month, 21-year-old Agustina Cruz had never left Argentina. Before this year, she had never even been to Buenos Aires, which is more than 900 miles southeast of her hometown of Palpalá, a small city of 60,000 people located in Jujuy, a region known for soaring rock formations. That all changed earlier this year when the university student became the inaugural recipient of the White Rose Award, a prize administered by the U.S. Embassy in Argentina and the Buenos Aires Holocaust Museum. Cruz won the award for advocating for the Romani, a community so marginalized in Argentina that people accused her of “getting into the mouth of the devil” — a Spanish expression — simply for publicly supporting a Roma family in the face of taunting from her classmates. But her planned trip this month to Washington, where she was slated to visit the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and tour the city, almost fell apart due to ignorance and hate, Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch reports.
Unexpected hurdle: One of Cruz’s university professors had initially told her that she would get an excused absence for missing class. But once that professor found out that Cruz would be on a trip to learn about the Holocaust, the professor said Cruz could not miss class, because the trip was sponsored by a Jewish organization. “She shouldn't be discriminated against for doing the right thing herself,” said Marc Stanley, who served as U.S. ambassador to Argentina from 2022 until January of this year. He worked with the Holocaust Museum of Buenos Aires on the award, and accompanied Cruz to Washington earlier this month after she decided to make the trip and risk a failing grade in her course. “In my community, there’s lots of ignorance. They do not respect the Roma community,” Cruz told JI via a translator at the end of an eventful day at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, which included a two-hour private tour and a meeting with a Holocaust
survivor.
Read the full story here. |
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Sheila Katz named chief Jewish life officer at Jewish Federations of North America |
Sheila Katz, the former CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women, will take over as chief Jewish life officer at the Jewish Federations of North America, the organization shared exclusively with eJewishPhilanthropy’s Nira Dayanim. She succeeds Sarah Eisenman, who stepped down last November. Katz will enter the position in December.
Background: Before departing NCJW in early October, Katz led the organization for over six years, spearheading several initiatives supporting women's reproductive rights, namely Jews for Abortion Access and Rabbis for Repro. Under Katz, NCJW’s membership more than doubled, increasing from 90,000 in 2019 to 250,000 today. Following Oct. 7, 2023, Katz also hosted a session at the United Nations to raise awareness about sexual violence perpetrated by Hamas during the attacks. Beyond NCJW, Katz has also held positions in the nonprofit sector, including serving on the executive committee of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, the board of governors of Tel Aviv University and the board of the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Katz also worked for Hillel International for 12 years, ultimately serving as vice president for student engagement and leadership.
Read the full story here and sign up for eJewishPhilanthropy’s Your Daily Phil newsletter here.
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The Trump Doctrine: In The Washington Post, Ned Price, who served in senior roles during the Biden administration, including as State Department spokesman and deputy to the U.S. ambassador to the U.N., looks at President Donald Trump’s foreign policy wins, as well as some stumbles, since returning to office. “First, Trump seems to understand that diplomacy is about engaging with the world as it is, not as we’d like it to be. His administration has employed the diplomatic adage that countries negotiate peace with their enemies, not with their friends. And the administration has spoken with plenty of adversaries — including Hamas, Iran, the Houthis, Russia and Venezuelan strongman Nicolás Maduro. … As we think about America’s next chapter, however, it would be a mistake not to learn from the few elements Trump has gotten right. The challenge for the next administration will be to pair those instincts with principle and purpose, pursuing a
foreign policy that consistently delivers for the American people.” [WashPost]
Moral Morass: The Atlantic’s George Packer warns of the “moral collapse” within the MAGA movement — and some elements of broader society — following a series of incidents in which GOP officials’ private conversations, which have included racist, homophobic and antisemitic statements, have been made public. “If the Young Republicans’ texts are seen merely as attacks on the groups they name, then they become the problem of Black and gay people, Jews, and women. But the texts represent a larger atrocity, one that has befallen all of America. Once you base moral judgments on group identity and political convenience, it becomes possible for people on the left to be anti-racist and anti-Semitic, and for people on the right to embrace Muslim haters in Israel and Jew haters in Germany. If moral values aren’t simple and universal — if they require a facility with the language of graduate seminars and single-issue activism — they won’t
move the immobilized, alienated, numb Americans who still haven’t given up on their country’s promise. The dehumanization of any group dehumanizes everyone. There will never be an end to learning this lesson.” [TheAtlantic]
Sam’s Club: The Wall Street Journal’s Berber Jin spotlights OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s efforts to attract tech companies, adding hundreds of billions of dollars to the combined stock prices of some of Silicon Valley’s largest semiconductor and cloud companies. “To achieve his vision of securing seemingly endless computing power for OpenAI, Altman has gone on a dealmaking blitz, playing the egos of Silicon Valley’s giants off one another as they race to cash in on OpenAI’s future growth. The resulting game of financial one-upmanship has tied the fates of the world’s biggest semiconductor and cloud companies — and vast swaths of the U.S. economy — to OpenAI, essentially making it too big to fail. All of them are now betting on the success of a startup that is nowhere near turning a profit and facing a mounting list of business challenges. Investors aren’t bothered.” [WSJ]
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President Donald Trump will appear at a fundraiser for Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) next month, as the veteran senator seeks reelection; the event, a golf tournament, marks Trump’s first in-person fundraiser of the 2026 cycle…
Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-SD) told reporters that he hoped the Trump administration would withdraw its nomination of Paul Ingrassia to lead the Office of Special Counsel following the publication of racist and antisemitic text messages in which Ingrassia bragged he has a “Nazi streak,” saying that even if a vote were to be held, it would fail…
The Wall Street Journal spotlights the “power struggle” that has emerged between Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy and Jared Isaacman, whose nomination to head NASA was pulled by the Trump administration earlier this year; Isaacman is reportedly back in contention for the role and interviewed last week with Duffy, who has been leading the agency in an interim capacity and wants to continue his
leadership of the U.S. space program…
In an interview with J. Weekly, The Jewish News of California, Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), who is leading a House push for U.S. recognition of a Palestinian state and has faced recent criticism for his appearance at a conference in which some speakers
defended Hamas' actions as "resistance," said he believes “that Zionism is self-determination of the Jewish people, and the right for Israel to exist. And I support that”...
Former Sen. John Sununu (R-NH) is expected this week to launch his bid for his old seat, which he lost in 2008…
All but two of the nine universities that were presented by the Trump administration with a “compact” to be prioritized for federal grants in exchange for admissions, programming and staffing concessions declined to endorse the plan; the University of Texas and Vanderbilt University did not reject the proposal outright but appeared to approach it with some hesitation…
Graham Platner, a Democrat running for Senate in Maine, dismissed speculation that a skull-and-crossbones tattoo on his chest is a Nazi symbol; “I am not a secret Nazi,” he told the “Pod Save America” podcast, adding, “Actually, if you read through my Reddit comments, I think you can pretty much figure out where I stand on Nazism and antisemitism and racism in general. I would say a lifelong opponent”...
The New York Times interviews James Snyder, the director of New York’s Jewish Museum, ahead of its reopening on Friday after a two-year renovation process…
The president-elect of the Oxford Union who was ousted in a no-confidence vote that he himself called is disputing the results of the voting…
Tablet looks at the ongoing legal battle over a Baghdad property that had belonged to an Iraqi Jewish family forced to flee during the Farhud that has been used by France as its embassy for more than 50 years…
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar called for a “renewal” of ties between Israel and Bolivia following the election of Rodrigo Paz as president earlier this week; La Paz severed relations with Israel in October 2023… Israeli officials identified the body of Sgt. Maj. Tal Haimi, who was killed during the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks and whose remains were repatriated from Gaza on Monday…
The Associated Press reports on satellite images that appear to indicate the construction of an airstrip on Yemen’s Zuqar Island, believed to be backed by anti-Houthi forces in the region…
New York Times investigative journalist Jodi Kantor is moving to the outlet’s Supreme Court team in its Washington bureau…
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation suspended its operations following the implementation of the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza, as it faces financial and leadership challenges, including the departure of Rev. Johnnie Moore as the group’s head…
Ali Shamkhani, the senior Iranian official who led the country’s crackdown on head coverings, is under fire following the leak of video taken from his daughter’s wedding earlier this year, in which he can be seen escorting his daughter, who is wearing a revealing dress and does not have her hair covered, down the aisle; Shamkhani’s similarly dressed wife also appears in the video…
Retired Rear Adm. John Kirby, who served as the national security spokesman during the Biden administration, is joining the University of Chicago as the director of the school’s Institute of Politics…
Chess grandmaster Daniel “Danya” Naroditsky died at 29… |
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CHRISTOPHER FURLONG/GETTY IMAGES |
King Charles III met on Monday with Rabbi Daniel Walker (pictured) and members of the Jewish community in Manchester, following the deadly attack on the city’s Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation on Yom Kippur in which two people were killed. |
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UNIQUE NICOLE/GETTY IMAGES |
Emmy Award-winning reality courtroom personality, "Judge Judy," Judith Sheindlin turns 83...
News anchor who worked for 36 years in Philadelphia, and author of three books on the Beatles, Larry Kane (born Lawrence Kanowitz) turns 83... Professor emeritus of Hebrew literature and philosophy at Harvard University, Shaye J. D. Cohen turns 77... Vice-chair of the Architectural and Design Review Commission of Beverly Hills, Terri Smooke...
Prime minister of Israel, celebrating both his Hebrew and civil birthdays today, Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu turns 76... Novelist, screenwriter, journalist and film producer, Amy Laura Ephron turns 73... Cardiologist and medical director at the Center for Women's Health at the NYU Langone Medical Center, Nieca Goldberg, MD turns 68... Legislative analyst at InstaTrac, a leading
Massachusetts legislative tracking and information service, Brian Rosman... Managing principal and chief investment officer at Penso Advisors, Ari Bergmann Ph.D. turns 64... Chairman and CEO of Pfizer, he was born and raised in a Sephardic family in Thessaloniki, Greece, Albert Bourla turns 64... Austin, Texas-based commercial insurance consultant, Mitchell B. Davis... President and CEO of the North American Values Institute, formerly known as the Jewish Institute for Liberal Values, David L. Bernstein turns 59... Emmy Award-winning television producer, she is best known for her work on “Saturday Night Live” and “30 Rock,” Marci Klein turns 58... Folk and folk-rock musician, he serves as the treasurer of The William Davidson Foundation, Rabbi Ethan Daniel Davidson turns 56... EVP and editorial director at U.S. News & World Report, Dafna Linzer turns 55... U.S. senator (R-NC) since 2023, Ted Budd turns 54... Classical composer, conductor and pianist, she is a graduate of Julliard, Lera Auerbach turns 52... Associate professor at The George Washington University, Alison Barkoff... Mayor of Phoenix, Kate Widland Gallego turns 44... Israeli musician, model and actress, Ninet Tayeb turns
42... Occupational therapist, Yael Hindy Applebaum... VP of external affairs at the Greater Miami Jewish Federation, Joshua Sayles... Dori Tenenbaum... Consultant for nonprofits after stints at the Orthodox Union and then Aish Global, Dan
Hazony... Manager of marketing and communications at the Union for Reform Judaism, Eliana Rudee... Actress, model and writer, Hari Nef turns 33... Internal medicine resident at Maimonides Hospital in NYC, Stuart "Shimmy" Jesin...
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