Good Friday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we cover the British government’s announced policy changes in the wake of a wave of antisemitic violence in the U.K., and report on comments made by the Department of Justice’s Harmeet Dhillon at a Holocaust Remembrance Day event comparing post-Oct. 7 antisemitism in the U.S. to 1930s Germany. We cover the Jewish Democratic Council of America’s decision to hold off on endorsing hard-left Democrat Graham Platner following Gov. Janet Mills’ departure from the Maine Senate primary, and report on the allocation of $300 million for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program in yesterday’s Senate vote to fund the Department of Homeland Security. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: William
Daroff, Boaz Weinstein and Mike Solomonov.
Today’s Daily Kickoff was curated by JI Executive Editor Melissa Weiss and Israel Editor Tamara Zieve, with an assist from Danielle Cohen-Kanik. Have a tip? Email us here. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇
|
|
|
|
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: Adeena Sussman's new cookbook spotlights simple cooking for complicated times; Acting Labor Secretary Keith Sonderling guided by Holocaust survivor grandparents; and New think tank report urges centralized public diplomacy to combat Israel’s post-Oct. 7 isolation. Print the latest edition here.
|
| |
|
-
Today is the deadline for Iran to send a revised peace proposal to Pakistan following the U.S.’ rejection of Tehran’s earlier proposal that offered to reopen the Strait of Hormuz to all traffic but push off nuclear talks. The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday evening that the Islamic Republic is increasingly struggling amid the U.S.-imposed blockade that is cutting off Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-linked shadow fleet from selling oil to China.
-
The McCain Institute’s 2026 Sedona Forum kicks off today in Arizona. Speakers at the two-day confab include Sen. Mark Kelly (D-AZ), Ruben Gallego (D-AZ), Peter Welch (D-VT) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI); Reps. Craig Goldman (R-TX), Don Bacon (R-NE), Jake Ellzey (R-TX), Jason Crow (D-CO), Mike Lawler (R-NY), Jim Himes (D-CT) and Stephanie Bice (R-OK); National Democratic Institute President Tamara Wittes, former CENTCOM head Gen. (ret.) Kenneth McKenzie, outgoing World Food Program executive director Cindy McCain, The Washington Post’s Jason Rezaian, Mo News’ Mosheh Oinounou, Polar Sun Ventures’ Ahron Cohen and David Axelrod.
-
The Milken Institute Global Conference kicks off Sunday in Beverly Hills, Calif. Speakers at the annual gathering of business executives, philanthropists and politicians include Govs. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Florida’s Ron DeSantis; Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Mark Warner (D-VA); NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang, Meta President Dina Powell McCormick; university presidents from Dartmouth, Vanderbilt and the University of Southern California; former athletes Tom Brady and Shaquille O'Neal; and International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Grossi. Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch will be in L.A. covering the conference. Shoot her an email if you'll be there, too.
|
|
|
|
Evening intelligence, exclusively for subscribers — what we're tracking and what's coming next. |
|
|
|
A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S TAMARA ZIEVE |
Kenton — a suburb of northwest London that doesn't ordinarily get international attention — has become one of the epicenters of the wave of antisemitic attacks sweeping England against Jewish individuals, synagogues and other institutions of Jewish life. It also happens to be where I grew up.
Last month, its synagogue was firebombed, causing some damage to the premises. Thankfully, no one was hurt. It is just one of the many incidents of antisemitic vandalism, harassment and violence across the U.K. that have made Jewish life all the more precarious in what was, previously, seen as a safe, close-knit Jewish community. The situation escalated further on Wednesday, when two Jewish men were stabbed in Golders Green, a suburb of London with a large Jewish population.
I moved to Israel as an adult, and have spent years covering the country as a journalist, most recently as Jewish Insider's Israel editor. In that time, the check-in calls have mostly gone one way, with friends from the U.K. touching base after terror attacks and through wars in Israel.
That dynamic has shifted in recent weeks. In a jarring role reversal, I have found myself checking up on Jewish British friends amid an alarming escalation of antisemitic attacks in London. Some will say the writing was on the wall, but there is a difference between knowing something is possible and watching it become real.
“At the moment, people across the Jewish community are waking up and almost expecting to find there's been yet another attack,” Justin Cohen, news editor and co-publisher of the U.K.’s Jewish News, told me. “And this has now been going on for several weeks."
Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
|
|
|
DOJ’s Harmeet Dhillon compares contemporary antisemitism of ‘educated elites’ to 1930s Germany |
In a speech at a federal government commemoration of the Holocaust on Thursday, Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights Harmeet Dhillon argued that the post-Oct. 7 wave of antisemitism in the U.S. resembles 1930s Germany and warned that modern bigotry is often perpetrated by “educated elites” under the cover of intellectual language, Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch reports
What she said: Dhillon, drawing on a speech that the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia gave at a Holocaust remembrance event nearly three decades ago, said that Germany’s reputation as an intellectual and scientific hub in the 1920s and 1930s is closely connected to the development of the Holocaust. “The road to Auschwitz was incremental and methodical. It began with excluding Jews through the legal, political, economic and social life of everyday society,” Dhillon said. “Many perpetrators of the Holocaust were often the most educated intelligentsia in Germany.”
Read the full story here. |
|
|
|
After surge in antisemitic violence, Keir Starmer announces policies to protect British Jews |
U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced several new policies aimed at protecting British Jews, including a ramped-up security presence, a tightening of immigration laws and a crackdown on extremist charities, in a speech on Thursday following the stabbing of two Jewish men in a suburb of London, Jewish Insider’s Haley Cohen reports.
Starmer’s speech: Starmer denounced the rise in antisemitic attacks, naming several that have occurred in recent months, and fear that British Jews experience while conducting everyday life. He listed new government priorities including increasing visible police presence in Jewish communities; increasing investments in Jewish security services; introducing new legislation to prevent “hate preachers” from entering the country and speaking on college campuses; and working to speed up sentencing for perpetrators of antisemitic attacks.
Read the full story here.
Cracking down: London’s Metropolitan Police arrested two Green Party candidates who allegedly shared antisemitic social media posts. Screenshots reported by The Guardian indicate that Sabine Mairey shared a post suggesting that “[r]amming a synagogue isn’t antisemitism. It’s revenge,” while Saiqa Ali shared a post of a man wearing a Hamas headband with the slogan “Resistance is freedom.”
|
|
|
|
New think tank report urges centralized public diplomacy to combat Israel’s post-Oct. 7 isolation |
The perennial complaint from supporters of Israel is that the Jewish state has “bad PR.” A new paper from the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University seeks to analyze the challenges and find solutions for Israel’s government to better handle them, Jewish Insider’s Lahav Harkov reports.
Authors’ stance: In an interview with JI, the paper’s authors — Akiva Tor, a former Israeli ambassador to South Korea and head of the Israeli Foreign Ministry’s department for world Jewry and world religions, and Ofir Dayan, author of Intifada Globalized, about young Westerners’ turn away from Israel — characterized Israel’s image problem as a danger to its security. Dayan noted that “it’s become a real issue of national security when Israel faces sanctions and countries are not willing to sell weapons. It affects Israel’s ability to execute plans and achieve its goals, and has a direct influence on Israel’s capability to fight.”
Read the full story here. |
|
|
|
Jewish Democratic Council of America not ready to endorse Graham Platner, says CEO |
The Jewish Democratic Council of America is not ready to endorse Graham Platner, the controversial presumptive Democratic nominee in Maine’s Senate race following Gov. Janet Mills’ departure from the race, said Halie Soifer, the group’s CEO, Jewish Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports.
Soifer’s statement: “We won’t support a Democrat who doesn’t represent the views and values of the vast majority of American Jews,” Soifer said in a statement, made shortly after Mills announced she was suspending her campaign. “JDCA has endorsed more than 120 candidates across the country who are fighting for the issues Jewish Americans care about and standing against antisemitism. It’s those many Democrats who have our backs, and we’ll have theirs as they work to defeat Republicans aligned with this White House whose views are antithetical to our values.”
Read the full story here. |
|
|
|
Mamdani’s inclusion of staffer wearing keffiyeh in rent regulation video draws criticism |
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani drew criticism on Thursday from several prominent Jewish New Yorkers for releasing a social media video on rent regulation hearings that prominently featured a public employee sporting a keffiyeh, a checkered scarf associated with the Palestinian cause, Jewish Insider’s Will Bredderman reports. The video, which runs just over one minute long, promotes a new door-to-door outreach campaign to encourage participation in upcoming meetings of the Rent Guidelines Board.
Backlash: In it, one of staffers featured in the video, Mohamed Alharbi — deputy borough director of the newly established Mayor’s Office of Mass Engagement — wears a keffiyeh over his shoulders, visible for all but a few moments of the clip. “Shameful video. The anti-Zionist messaging isn’t subtle — it fuels a broader climate that emboldens antisemitism,” wrote Todd Richman, a veteran Democratic Party operative and co-founder of Democratic Majority for Israel. Read the full story here. |
|
|
|
House Dems, Jewish groups welcome $300 million in NSGP funding but call for more |
House Democrats and Jewish groups welcomed the passage of $300 million for the Nonprofit Security Grant Program on Thursday, while warning that funding for the program remains insufficient to fully protect the Jewish community and places of worship amid a surge in antisemitism, Jewish Insider’s Matthew Shea reports.
State of play: The appropriation was passed through a bill funding most of the Department of Homeland Security, approved in the House on Thursday after receiving approval in the Senate. The move ends the monthslong shutdown of agencies including the Coast Guard, Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which operates NSGP. While lawmakers welcomed the fact that funding marks an increase from the $274.5 million provided in fiscal year 2025, they cautioned that the $300 million still falls short of the need within the Jewish community, given the threat level.
Read the full story here.
Voted down: The Senate rejected for the sixth time an effort from Democrats to force the Trump administration to halt the war in Iran — with the vote once again falling largely along party lines. |
|
|
|
To read articles on our site, you need a free login. Create your account once — you can use Google or Apple for one-tap access. |
|
|
|
Mourning Miranda, in the Cloud: In The Wall Street Journal, Danielle Crittenden, whose daughter Miranda died in 2024, reflects on uphill efforts to retrieve Miranda’s digital data while facing regular reminders of her daughter on her own devices. “Our online profiles outlive our physical bodies. We can pack or give away possessions, but the tech gods preserve the digital lives forever of those we’ve lost. … Thirty years ago, the deceased left behind paper letters, files and boxes of photos. Now, the ‘clouds’ hold every scrap of our existence after we die, locked behind walls. Miranda was a talented writer. Were there unpublished essays? What about her photographs?” [WSJ]
The Road to Ruin: In The Washington Post, the American Enterprise Institute’s Danielle Pletka posits that radical Islamism will be the next ideology to join nationalism and socialism as failed movements in the Middle East. “Now another hinge point is here, and this one offers a liberalizing pathway that can respect Islam (and Judaism and Christianity) while delivering a better life to the hundreds of millions of people who live in the Middle East. Such a movement would repudiate the ideologies, from pan-Arab nationalism to socialism to radical Islamism, that overpromised and underdelivered and instead tread the path of slow opening that is now seen in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and even Syria and Lebanon.” [WashPost]
The Bondi Disconnect: eJewishPhilanthropy Managing Editor Judah Ari Gross reflects on the disparity between Australian Jewish communal concerns and law enforcement’s assessments of those concerns leading up to the December 2025 terror attack targeting a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney’s Bondi Beach. “As violent antisemitism rises around the world — seen most apparently in this week’s stabbing attack in a heavily Jewish suburb of London and in last month’s attempted terror attack at Temple Israel outside Detroit — recognizing the difference between feelings of safety and actual safety becomes critical. … While it is easy to say with the benefit of hindsight, the Jews gathered at Bondi Beach did not need to ‘feel safe,’ they needed to be safe, and they weren’t.” [eJP]
|
|
|
|
Be featured: Email us to inform the JI readership of your upcoming event, job opening or other communication. |
|
|
|
The Financial Times reports that during the recent Iran war, Israel sent its Iron Beam laser-defense system to the United Arab Emirates to shoot down Iranian missiles in addition to a previously reported Iron Dome battery and operators…
The New York Times does a deep dive into recent attacks on Jewish individuals and sites across Europe, most of which bear the hallmarks of Iranian “hybrid warfare,” which the Times describes as involving “tactics, including cyberattacks, sabotage, assassination and disinformation campaigns, that are used covertly to destabilize countries, erode trust in institutions and undermine adversaries without provoking a major military response”...
Boaz Weinstein’s Saba Capital Management is poised to take over Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust, following a shareholder vote yesterday to replace the trust’s current board…
The Wall Street Journal looks at how the fallout from the release of emails between Jeffrey Epstein and Ariane de Rothschild is affecting the other branches of the Rothschild family and “threatens to deepen a divide among the descendants at a time when the two remaining banks bearing the family name are increasingly in competition”...
Yeshiva University announced that U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee will give the school’s commencement address later this month…
Rochester, N.Y., Rabbi Peter Stein served as yesterday’s guest chaplain in the House of Representatives…
Mike Solomonov’s Zahav is celebrating its 18th year — represented by the Hebrew letter chai, which means life — with a series of Shabbat dinners hosted at the Philadelphia restaurant this summer…
In The Wall Street Journal, Rabbi Avi Shafran observes the clash between Rabbi Warren Goldstein, chief rabbi of the Union of Orthodox Synagogues of South Africa, and Pope Leo XIV over the pontiff’s criticism of the war in Iran…
Authorities in Colombia are investigating the homicide of a Hasidic Jewish man from New York whose body was discovered in Bogota…
Amid tensions between Jerusalem and Kiev over allegations that Israel accepted Russian shipments of grain believed to have been taken from occupied areas of Ukraine, Israeli grain importer Zenziper rejected a Russian cargo ship slated to deliver a shipment at the port in Haifa; the Israeli Grain Importers Association said the Russian vessel “will be required to find an alternative destination for its discharge”...
FIFA President Gianni Infantino confirmed that Iran’s national team will play in this summer’s World Cup across North America, after a member of the team’s delegation to the FIFA congress was denied entry to Canada this week, an incident that Ottawa’s foreign affairs minister said was “unintentional”...
Toward the end of the congress’ gathering, Infantino attempted a photo with the heads of the Israeli and Palestinian delegations, but was denied when Palestinian Football Federation President Jibril Rajoub, who in 2019 faced a FIFA investigation over his alleged glorification of terror, refused to stand next to Israeli Football Association Vice President Basim Sheikh Suliman…
The New York Times reports on Hezbollah’s use of drones powered by fiber-optic cables that the Israeli army is struggling to combat; the UAVs, which are faster than normal drones and not controlled by radio signals susceptible to GPS jamming, have also been used in the Russia-Ukraine war…
The Jewish Theological Seminary named Rabbi Mike Uram as the school’s next chancellor; Uram, who is currently the chief Jewish learning officer at the Jewish Federations of North America, previously served as the executive director of University of Pennsylvania Hillel for 15 years…
|
|
|
|
William Daroff (left), the CEO of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, met on Thursday with Felix Klein, Germany’s antisemitism commissioner, at the Interior Ministry in Berlin to advance Transatlantic coordination against antisemitism. |
|
|
|
Holocaust and genocide scholar, born in the Displaced Persons camp of Bergen-Belsen, Germany, Menachem Z. Rosensaft turns 78…
FRIDAY: Retired national director of the Anti-Defamation League, Abraham Henry Foxman turns 86... Professor at Yeshiva University and editor emeritus of Tradition, an Orthodox theological journal, Rabbi Shalom Carmy turns 77... Deborah Chin... Boston-area actor, David Alan Ross... Brigadier-general (res.) and former chief medical officer in the IDF, he was also a member of Knesset for 10
years, Aryeh Eldad turns 76... Of counsel at D.C.-based Sandler Reiff where he specializes in redistricting law, Jeffrey M. Wice... Member of the House of Representatives (D-CO) from 2007 to 2023, Edwin George "Ed" Perlmutter turns 73... Israeli entrepreneur and software engineer, founder and former CEO of Conduit, Israel’s first billion-dollar internet company, Ronen Shilo turns 68... Austrian-Israeli singer-songwriter, Timna Brauer turns 65... Real estate entrepreneur based in Southern California, Eli Tene turns 63... Member of the board of governors of the Jewish Federation of Greater Rochester, Rina F. Chessin... Member of the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, David R. Karger turns 59... Israeli judoka, she is a member of the International Olympic Committee and the head of the merchandise division of Paramount Israel, Yael Arad turns 59... Majority leader of the Washington state Senate until 2025, he is a co-owner of minor league baseball's Spokane Indians, Andrew Swire "Andy" Billig turns 58... Staff writer at The Atlantic, Jonathan Chait turns 54... Radio personality and voice-over artist, Gina Grad turns 48... Former professional tennis player with 23 USTA Pro Circuit singles titles, now a tennis coach, Michael Craig Russell turns 48... Attorney and co-founder of I Am a Voter, a nonpartisan civic engagement organization, Mandana Rivka Dayani turns 44... D.C.-based political reporter, Ben C. Jacobs turns 42... Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative producer at NBC News, Jonathan Gerberg... Former
member of the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova, Marina Tauber turns 40… Team lead at GrowthSpace, Jenny Feuer... Principal at Forward Global, Omri Rahmil... Photographer known for incorporating Jewish culture into her work, she is the digital media editor at the Jewish Women's Archive, Hannah Altman turns 31... Sam Zieve-Cohen turns 29...
SATURDAY: Former U.S. ambassador to Denmark, he financed the visitors center at the Touro Synagogue in Newport, R.I., John Langeloth Loeb turns 96... Former lord chief justice of England and Wales, Baron Harry Kenneth Woolf turns 93... Retired professor at NYU's Center for Global Affairs, journalist, international negotiator and private consultant, Dr. Alon Ben-Meir turns 89... Author of 23 books and conservative political activist, Alan Merril Gottlieb turns 79... U.S. senator (D-VT) since 2023, Peter Welch turns 79... Former member of the Texas state Senate, she was born in NYC to Holocaust survivor parents, Florence Shapiro turns 78... Former USAID contractor imprisoned by Cuba from 2009 to
2014, Alan Phillip Gross turns 77... Co-founder and president of private equity firm NCH Capital, he funded the establishment of Chabad houses at universities throughout the world, George Rohr turns 72... Former under secretary of state for public diplomacy in the Obama administration, following a stint as managing editor of Time magazine, Richard Allen "Rick" Stengel turns 71... Member of the
New York State Assembly since 2010, he was previously a member of the NYC Council and former Deputy Superintendent of the NYS Banking Commission, David Weprin turns 70... Former U.S. secretary of commerce in the Obama administration, she is on the board of Microsoft, Penny Sue Pritzker turns 67... Partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, she is active on many nonprofit boards including Penn Law School and the Jewish Federations of North America, Jodi J. Schwartz turns 66... Television writer and reality television personality known for his high IQ test scores, Richard G. Rosner turns 66... Admiral in the IDF (res.), he served as the commander of the Israeli Navy, Ram Rothberg turns 62...Chief rabbi of Slovakia, Rabbi Baruch Myers turns 62... Senior attorney in the Newark, N.J.,
office of Eckert Seamans, Laura E. "Lori" Fein... Founder and chairman of Shutterstock, Jonathan E. Oringer turns 52... Israeli writer known for his novels, essays and philosophical work, Yaniv Iczkovits turns 51... SVP of Drumfire Public Affairs following four years as deputy chief of staff to then-Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, Stephen Schatz... Journalist and founder of MamaDen, a platform that connects and empowers mothers, Julianna Goldman turns 45... Podcast host and founder and president of ETS Advisory, Emily Tisch Sussman... Attorney in the office of the New York attorney general, Gabe Cahn... Chief development officer at Grinspoon Hillel at Cornell, Susanna K. Cohen... Running back for the NFL's Carolina Panthers, A.J. Dillon turns 28...
SUNDAY: Southern California-area writer and activist promoting wellness, Deborah Shainman Szekely turns 104... Senior researcher at the International Institute for Counter-Terrorism at Reichman University, Ely Karmon, Ph.D. turns 85... Television journalist known for his work at ABC News and Al Jazeera English, David Marash turns 84... U.S. senator (R-ID), Jim Risch turns 83... Venture capitalist and economist, his original family name was Jacobstein, William H. Janeway turns 83... Francine Holtzman... U.S. senator (D-OR), his original family name was Weidenreich, Ron Wyden turns 77... Six-time Tony Award-winning Broadway producer, Stewart F. Lane turns 75... Retired attorney, he represented political parties, campaigns, candidates, governors and members of Congress on election law matters, Benjamin Langer Ginsberg turns 74... Retired chair and CEO of Mondelez International, a multinational food and beverage company, Irene Rosenfeld turns 73... Retired partner from the Chicago office of DLA Piper, now a consultant at Washburn Advisors, Mark D. Yura turns 73... Political reporter and former columnist for The Richmond Times-Dispatch, Jeff E. Schapiro... Retired senior advisor at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Susan Steinmetz... EVP at NBCUniversal News Group, he is on the Board of Visitors at Duke Law School, Stephen Labaton turns 65... Former owner of the NBA's Brooklyn Nets and Barclays Center, Mikhail Prokhorov turns 61... Lobbyist since 2010, he was previously deputy assistant secretary of state for legislative affairs in the Bush 43 administration, Scott A. Kamins... Veteran NHL player, he is now an assistant coach for the NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning, Jeff Halpern turns 50... Israeli singer and actress, winner of multiple Israeli Female Singer of the Year awards, Miri Mesika turns 48... Reporter for Politico New Jersey and author of New Jersey's Playbook, Matthew R. Friedman... Jewish Insider's director of audience development, Kevin
Hechtkopf... Educated at the Hebrew Academy of San Francisco, he was a defensive lineman in the NFL, Igor Olshansky turns 44... Managing director and co-head of executive communications of SKDKnickerbocker, he was a speechwriter for President Obama, Stephen Andrew Krupin... President of Flaxman Strategies, Seth Flaxman... Israeli minister for social equality and women's advancement, she is a member of the
Knesset for the Likud party, May Golan turns 40... Benjamin S. Davis... NBA All-Star for the Sacramento Kings, he is studying to convert to Judaism, Domantas Sabonis turns 30... Director of the Judaism and State Policy Center at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Israel, Tani Frank... Foreign correspondent for NBC and a former Middle East correspondent for the Daily Telegraph, Raf Sanchez...
|
|
|
|
|