Good Friday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we look at how a court’s decision to restore Voice of America’s operations could impact the broadcaster’s coverage in Iran, and report on Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard’s efforts to put some distance between herself and her controversial aides. We have the scoop on a call from 150 House lawmakers to increase Nonprofit Security Grant Program funding to $1 billion for the next fiscal year 2027, and report on the upcoming deadline for the Israeli government to pass a budget, or risk triggering early elections. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Rep. Jared Moskowitz, Ted Deutch and Israeli Defense Minister Israel
Katz.
Today’s Daily Kickoff was curated by JI Executive Editor Melissa Weiss and Israel Editor Tamara Zieve, with assists from Danielle Cohen-Kanik, Lahav Harkov and Marc Rod. 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: As war wages in Iran, Justice Dept. reaches ceasefire with Tehran‑backed network in Manhattan; Education Committee finds SJP and faculty groups play central role in campus antisemitism; and Josh Shapiro tests measured, pro‑Israel message in progressive podcast tour. Print the latest edition here.
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Israel confirmed Iranian state media reports this morning that Ali Mohammad Naini, the spokesperson for the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, had been killed in a strike, hours after he rebuffed a claim by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that Iran was no longer able to manufacture ballistic missiles.
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Meanwhile, the U.S. is kicking off what is expected to be a multiweek operation to open the Strait of Hormuz. In a joint statement released last night, the U.K., France, Japan, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands, joined later by Canada, said they backed the American effort to restore freedom of movement through the crucial waterway.
- In New York City, the House Appropriations Committee is holding a field hearing today on accountability and reform at the U.N.
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The Fanatics Flag Football Classic is taking place tomorrow in Los Angeles after being moved from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, due to the ongoing war.
- Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Yechiel Leiter will appear on CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday.
- The Leffell Foundation’s third annual rabbinical conference kicks off on Sunday in Florida.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S LAHAV HARKOV |
Over the last three weeks, Qatar’s leadership has woken up to a reality it had long seemed determined to disprove: that money will only take you so far. And so Doha has fallen back on a longstanding Middle Eastern tradition of blaming Israel for its problems.
Qatar is the top foreign contributor to American universities, World Cup host, patron of the arts and donor of the new Air Force One, and the influence that comes with philanthropy led much of the world to turn a blind eye to the dark side of the
Al Thani royal family’s generosity: Funding perhaps the world’s most effective propaganda arm for radical Islam, Al Jazeera, hosting the leaders of Hamas and other terrorist groups, and more.
With a massive real estate portfolio that includes properties in London and Manhattan, its efforts to bail out White House Special Envoy Steve Witkoff in 2023 and 2025, and its work with former lobbyists now in the Trump administration — such as Attorney General Pam Bondi and FBI Director Kash Patel — Doha appeared to have built a winning strategy to ensure its voice was heard in the White House.
Despite public opposition from Qatar and other Gulf states, the U.S., alongside Israel, went to war with Iran. Now, Doha finds itself on the receiving end of attacks from the Islamic Republic. Tehran’s attacks on Qatari gas facilities have led to a loss of 17% of Qatar's capacity to export liquefied natural gas and an estimated $20 billion loss of annual revenue for the next three to five years, QatarEnergy CEO Saad al-Kaabi told Reuters.
The latest Iranian assault on Doha’s gas industry came after Israel struck the Iranian side of the South Pars gas field, shared with Qatar. In a message that appeared, at least in part, an attempt to appease Doha, President Donald Trump blamed Israel — in mild terms by Trump standards — and said he had no idea about the attack, a claim experts and former Israeli and U.S. officials have said is unlikely to be true. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a Thursday night press conference that Israel “acted alone” and will respect Trump’s request that Israel not bomb the gas field again.
In addition, Trump threatened that if Iran attacks “a very innocent, in this case, Qatar,” the U.S. will “massively blow up the entirety of the South Pars Gas Field at an amount of strength and power that Iran has never seen or witnessed before.”
Ariel Admoni, a Qatar expert at the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security (JISS), said Trump’s statement shows “great anger” in Doha “expressed through pressure on Trump and a demand to clarify that he wasn’t part of this, in order not to hurt [Qatar’s] image” of being well-connected to the administration.
Read the rest of 'What You Should Know' here. |
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Court ruling reviving VOA sparks cautious hope for expanded Iran coverage |
A federal judge’s ruling this week that voided the Trump administration’s efforts, overseen by Kari Lake, to shutter Voice of America, restoring more than 1,000 journalists and other employees by Monday, is raising some hopes that the embattled international broadcaster funded by the federal government may now be able to ramp up its Persian-language coverage to reach Iranians at a crucial moment amid war with the U.S. and Israel, Jewish Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports.
Near shutdown: While VOA had resumed some of its Persian news broadcasting in recent months, it has been hobbled by a yearlong near shutdown ordered by the Trump administration that had reduced the organization to a skeletal staff. Earlier this month, the judge ordered that Lake’s appointment as acting chief had been unlawful and nullified her aggressive moves to gut VOA. One USAGM source expressed optimism that the judge’s decisions would result in “more resources,” but cautioned that “there are still leadership issues” in the Persian service — once one of VOA’s largest divisions — stifling its ability to report exhaustively on news developments and offer coverage without the appearance of bias.
Read the full story here. |
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DNI Tulsi Gabbard keeps some distance from controversial aides Joe Kent, Dan Caldwell |
Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard distanced herself — to a degree — on Thursday from two aides who have taken hostile stances toward the U.S.’ Middle East policy: the recently departed director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Joe Kent, and the recently hired Dan Caldwell, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod reports.
DNI dilemma: “He said a lot of things in that letter,” Gabbard said, when first asked at a House Intelligence Committee hearing if she agreed with Kent’s controversial and antisemitic resignation letter. Pressed again on whether Kent’s comments blaming Israel for the war in Iran concern her, Gabbard affirmed that they do. Regarding Caldwell — a prominent GOP isolationist who was reportedly hired to serve in the ODNI, Gabbard’s agency, after being fired amid a leak investigation from the Pentagon last year — Gabbard denied personal knowledge of him and claimed he would have no influence over intelligence products. A longtime isolationist, Gabbard also declined to discuss her own views on the war in Iran.
Read the full story here. |
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Democrats skeptical of proposed $200 billion in Iran war funding, raising questions about passage |
The Pentagon’s reported intention to ask Congress for $200 billion for an emergency supplemental to fund the U.S. military amid war in Iran is being met with prompt rejection from many congressional Democrats, raising questions about whether the funding will pass through normal procedures or if supporters will have to resort to partisan budget reconciliation measures, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod and Matthew Shea report.
What they’re saying: Sen. Ruben Gallego (D-AZ) said that the size of the request suggests that the administration is planning for a much larger war than initially envisioned. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) predicted that the request would be carefully considered and matched to U.S. needs. Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) was among the first Republicans to firmly reject any supplemental military spending. Read the full story here with additional comments from Sens. Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY), Lindsey Graham (R-SC) and Susan Collins (R-ME).
Up in arms: The Senate is set to hold another round of votes on blocking U.S. arms transfers to Israel, as Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) filed three new joint resolutions of disapproval against $658.8 million in sales of 500- and 1,000-pound bombs to Israel and “defense articles” for 250-pound bombs, JI’s Marc Rod reports. |
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150 House lawmakers push for $1 billion in security grant funding in 2027 |
In a letter to the leaders of the House Appropriations Committee, a bipartisan group of 150 House members asked the committee to provide $1 billion in funding for the Department of Homeland Security’s Nonprofit Security Grant Program in 2027, a massive expansion of the program and an unprecedented increase in their request level, Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod reports.
Call for action: The request letter, which has been sent annually for the last several years at the start of the House’ appropriations process, comes this year in the immediate aftermath of an attack at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., and its early childhood center. “The fact of the matter is, around this country, we've all experienced a rise in antisemitism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, hatred of all types,” Rep. Gabe Amo (D-RI), who again co-led the request with Rep. Michael McCaul (R-TX), told JI on Thursday. “This is a response that's proportional to the demand, and right now, we need to act swiftly.”
Read the full story here.
Exclusive: A group of congressional Democrats is urging the State Department to restart chartered evacuation flights and take additional steps to help U.S. citizens who wish to leave Israel amid the ongoing war with Iran. |
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Netanyahu has less than two weeks to pass a budget — or go to early elections |
The war against Iran may have united the vast majority of Israelis who support its aims, but much of the governing coalition’s prewar political obstacles still have to be resolved by the end of the month — including the passing of a state budget for the current year and a Haredi conscription law — or else an early election will automatically be called, Jewish Insider’s Lahav Harkov reports.
State of play: The coalition failed to pass a 2026 budget by Dec. 31, a regular occurrence in Israel, due to several policy disputes. By law, if the Dec. 31 deadline is not met, it may be extended to the end of March. However, if the Knesset does not pass a budget by the end of March, the law states that the body will automatically dissolve, with an election held 90 days later. The Knesset is slated to go into recess on March 24, but it appears increasingly likely that the legislature will stay in session, with efforts to finalize the budget continuing until hours before Passover, which begins on the evening of April 1.
Read the full story here.
Survey says: A new poll by The Times of Israel’s Hebrew site, Zman Israel, has Gadi Eisenkot’s centrist Yashar party overtaking former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s party, but still falling behind Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud. Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid fell to its lowest standing since Zman Israel began polling.
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Report on declining Jewish enrollment at Harvard raises alarm and sparks debate |
A new report finding that Jewish enrollment at Harvard University has fallen to roughly 7% — its lowest level since the pre-World War II era — has sounded alarms among some Jewish leaders, while touching off a debate at Harvard about its accuracy. The figure marks a steep decline from a decade ago, when Jewish students made up about twice that share, and represents the lowest proportion among Ivy League schools with available data, Jewish Insider’s Haley Cohen reports.
Compare and contrast: The decrease is not reflected at all Ivy Leagues, though: At Princeton, Jews declined at less than a fifth of the rate of their white non-Jewish peers. At Brown and Cornell, Jewish enrollment held or grew over the past decade. The 64-page report, “A Narrowing Gate: Jewish Enrollment at Harvard and Its Peers, 1967-2025,” released this week by the university’s official Jewish alumni group, argues that the decline is not simply the byproduct of neutral admissions trends, but reflects a growing “ambivalence” to admitting Jewish students on Harvard’s part.
Read the full story here. |
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Target on His Back: Roll Call’s Ryan Tarinelli interviews Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-FL) about having been a target of a foiled terror plot. “‘In any of his writings that they discovered, he wasn’t mad about any of my policy positions or votes. It was simply the fact that I was Jewish [and] my support for Israel,’ Moskowitz said. Efforts to dehumanize Jewish people appear in normal life, Moskowitz said, but even more so online, where it can reach younger people.” [RollCall]
Too Close For Comfort: In The Wall Street Journal, Third Way’s Jonathan Cowan and Lily Cohen call on Democrats to distance themselves from far-left streamer Hasan Piker, who has increasingly been embraced by elements of the left. “Mr. Piker is anti-American, antiwomen, anti-Western and antisemitic. No Democrat should engage with him. All should seek to push him to the fringe, where he belongs. This isn’t happening. … There’s no excuse for putting political tribalism before Jewish safety. Or for overlooking hatred to generate likes online. Or for failing to act against the surge of antisemitism, spread by the Hasan Pikers of the world and normalized by too many on the Democratic side.” [WSJ]
The Rhodes to Ruin: In The Hill, American Jewish Committee CEO Ted Deutch raises concerns about comments made this week by Obama administration official Ben Rhodes calling for the Democratic Party to ostracize lawmakers in the party who support military action in Iran. “Disagreements about war and peace are as old as American democracy itself. They should be debated vigorously, examined carefully, and decided with the seriousness that questions of life and death demand. But declaring that those who reach a different conclusion simply don’t belong crosses a very different line: It replaces debate with ideological exclusion. Rhodes’s comment reflects a broader and troubling shift in political discourse. Increasingly, foreign policy disagreements are treated not as differences in judgment but as evidence of moral failure. The expectation is no longer that leaders will argue their case and persuade others. It is that those who dissent should be
pushed outside the bounds of legitimate debate.” [TheHill]
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The Treasury Department is mulling lifting sanctions on 140 million barrels of Iranian oil currently at sea in an effort to lower oil prices, which hit $119 a barrel on Thursday…
Israel struck Syrian infrastructure on Friday, which Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said was in response to attacks on the Druze minority near the border with Israel, adding, "Israel will not stand by and will not allow anyone to harm the Druze under the cover of our war against the Iranian terrorist regime and against the Hezbollah terrorist organization in Lebanon”...
Bazan Group reported to investors on Friday that vital infrastructure at its oil refinery in Haifa had sustained damage in an Iranian missile attack on Thursday, but it is expected to return to regular operations within a few days... The Wall Street Journal looks at how President Donald Trump has narrated his version of the Iran war and communicated U.S. policy on Iran through scores of Truth Social posts…
Rep. Greg Meeks (D-NY), the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, criticized the administration for bypassing normal congressional review procedures to approve $20 billion in arms and military equipment sales to the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Jordan… The New York Times does a postmortem on AIPAC’s spending in the recent Illinois primaries, as the group — and Israel — faces diminishing support from Democrats…
The University of California Board of Regents reached a settlement with the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights over what Jewish students said was the University of California, Berkeley’s failure to address campus antisemitism; under the terms of the settlement, the school will implement mandatory campus-wide antisemitism and anti-discrimination training, and hire a Title VI coordinator…
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission is surveying Cornell University employees about antisemitism they have experienced or observed on the campus as the Trump administration pursues a civil rights case against the Ivy League school…
Palestinian American author Susan Abulhawa criticized American Jews and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani — who last week distanced himself and his wife, who illustrated one of Abulhawa’s books, from the author over her numerous antisemitic comments — saying that “Jewish Americans are the most privileged demographic in this country … no terrible words should be spared for these monsters, because they are monsters”...
In the 24 hours before a fringe Catholic political group planned to host a gala in Washington honoring a number of public figures who have faced accusations of antisemitism, including Candace Owens and Joe Kent, several prominent members of the American Catholic Church stated unequivocally that antisemitism is not a part of their religious doctrine, Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch reports…
The Lebanese American man who attacked Temple Israel in West Bloomfield Township, Mich., sent a photo of himself with the rifle he used to a family member on the day of the attack…
Temple Israel released photos of the extensive damage caused during last week’s attack, saying that unauthorized photos that have been published “have caused considerable harm to the survivors of last week's attack” and that the congregation was sharing their own photos “to take back control of our narrative”…
The Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco announced plans to sell its building in the city’s downtown Yerba Buena district after temporarily shuttering in late 2024 over financial challenges…
The Wall Street Journal reviews “Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man,” the feature-length continuation of the popular TV series that centers around a Nazi plot to destabilize the British economy…
The Washington Post spotlights the northern Israel residents who are staying in the area rather than evacuating amid constant fire from Hezbollah in Lebanon… |
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Israeli President Isaac Herzog and First Lady Michal Herzog visited the Israeli Arab town of Kfar Qasem, where several homes and businesses were hit by missile shrapnel earlier this week. |
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DAVID LIVINGSTON/GETTY IMAGES |
Stage and screen actor, television director and musician, best-known for his role as the title character in the television comedy series "Barney Miller," Hal Linden (born Harold Lipshitz) turns 95…
FRIDAY: Retired consultant on public policy issues to IBM, Ford and Citicorp, among others, he was the chair of the Maryland Commission on Civil Rights, Norman Ira Gelman turns 97… Rabbi and human rights activist, he has served for over 60 years as the senior rabbi of NYC's Park East Synagogue, Arthur Schneier turns 96… Pioneer of financial futures, he is the chairman emeritus of CME Group (formerly the Chicago Mercantile Exchange), Leo Melamed turns 94… Member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences as a geologist and oceanographer, but known popularly as poet and performer, Alexander Gorodnitsky turns 93… Australian award-winning writer of Portuguese Sephardi descent, author of fiction, nonfiction, screenplays and poetry collections, David George Joseph Malouf turns 92… Senior advisor to the family office of Charles Bronfman, he was previously SVP and COO of UJA-Federation of New York, Dr. Jeffrey R. Solomon turns 81… Senior lecturer of Talmud at Ner Israel Rabbinical College in Baltimore, Rabbi Tzvi Berkowitz turns 75… Award-winning author of 26 children's books, Louis Sachar turns 72… Owner of Baltimore-based Diamond Point Metals, Jack Zager… Former professional tennis player, Bruce Manson turns 70… Philanthropist and pioneer in corporate social responsibility, formerly CEO of family-owned Timberland, Jeffrey Swartz turns 66… Retired as Israel's chief of police in 2018 after a 27-year prior career at the Shin Bet, Roni Alsheikh turns 63…
Host of “Time Team America,” a PBS program, she also produced and directed a feature-length documentary titled “Our Summer in Tehran,” Justine Shapiro turns 63… Chilean businessman with substantial mining interests, in 2014 he donated seven newly written Sefer Torah scrolls to synagogues on six different continents, Leonardo Farkas turns 59… Former member of the Knesset for the Blue and White alliance, he served as minister of justice, Avraham Daniel “Avi” Nissenkorn turns 59… Journalist, author and lecturer, he is an editor-at-large for Esquire, Arnold Stephen "A.J." Jacobs turns 58… Actor, podcast host, director, comedian and advocate for Israel, Michael Rapaport turns 56… First-ever Jewish mayor of Lansing, Mich., now in his second term, Andy Schor turns 51… Award-winning Israeli actress, her credits include a role in “Fauda,” Netta Garti turns 46… Actor, music video director and writer, he is the son of Dustin Hoffman, Jake Hoffman turns 45… Head of global strategic partner sales within the financial services group at Amazon Web Services, Daniel
M. Eckstein… Senior writer and messaging strategist for Apple, Matt Finkelstein… Senior editor of politics, policy and ideas at Vox, Benjamin “Benjy” Sarlin… Director of real estate development for a N.Y.-based hedge fund, Jason Lifton… Comedian, writer and actress who gained popularity through her comedy videos on YouTube, Joanna Hausmann turns 37… New York City-based comedian, his most recent show centers on a meeting of neo-Nazis that he attended incognito in Queens, Alex Edelman turns 37… Talmud teacher and secretary of the committee of Jewish law and standards at the Rabbinical Assembly, Max Buchdahl… Technical program manager at
Bugcrowd, Tatiana Uklist turns… Ehud Lazar…
SATURDAY: Rabbi emeritus of Manhattan's Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun and former principal of the Ramaz School, Rabbi Haskel Lookstein turns 94… Harvard professor, biochemist, physicist, molecular biology pioneer and winner of the 1980 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Walter Gilbert turns 94… Scholar of Jewish mysticism and a retired dean at the Hebrew College in Boston, Arthur Green turns
85… Far Rockaway, N.Y., resident, Samuel Gross… First Jewish member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New Hampshire until 2011, he is of counsel to the law firm of Shaheen & Gordon, Paul Hodes turns 75… Former executive director of The Charles Bronfman Prize, Jill Collier Indyk… Chabad rabbi, martial artist and chaplain for 13 years in the Israel Prison Service, Fishel
Jacobs turns 70… President of NYC- and Singapore-based KWR International, Keith W. Rabin… Retired director general of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he was previously Israel's ambassador to Australia, Yuval Rotem turns 67… Istanbul-born entrepreneur, hotelier and real estate developer, he is president of NYC-based Alexico Group LLC, Izak Senbahar turns 67… Co-founder of Wynnefield Capital
Management, Joshua H. Landes… Award-winning film, stage and television actor and singer whose roles include the title role in “Ferris Bueller's Day Off,” Matthew Broderick turns 64… Israeli rock musician and record producer, he is best known for being the guitarist and one of the songwriters in the rock band Mashina, Shlomi Bracha turns 64… Hedge fund manager,
philanthropist and former chairman of the board of the New York City Opera, Roy Niederhoffer turns 60… Partner in the Los Angeles office of Liebert Cassidy Whitmore, Michael Blacher… Founding editor of The Dispatch and author of three NYT bestsellers, Jonah Goldberg turns 57… James Beard Foundation Award-winning chef from Miami, Michelle Bernstein turns 56… Emmy Award-winning CNN anchor, John Berman turns 54… IDF general, he is one of the highest-ranking Druze ever in the IDF, Ghassan Alian turns 54… President and founder of Bully Pulpit International, Andrew Bleeker… Stage and voice actress, Alyson Leigh Rosenfeld turns 39… Board member at Shefa: Jewish Psychedelic Support, Hadas Alterman… Staff attorney at Fair Shake Environmental Legal Services in Cleveland, Addison Caruso…
SUNDAY: Professor emeritus of education and humanities at the University of Virginia, E.D. Hirsch turns 98… “Star Trek’s” Captain Kirk, in 2021 he flew to space aboard a Blue Origin sub-orbital capsule, William Shatner turns 95… Born in Iran, twice elected as mayor of Beverly Hills, he is a past president of Sinai Temple in Los Angeles, Jamshid "Jimmy" Delshad turns 86… Dentist,
born in Tel Aviv and raised in NYC, he practiced in Norwalk, Conn., Murray Bruckel, DDS… Academy Award-winning screenwriter, his work includes "Forrest Gump" and "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," Eric R. Roth turns 81… Israeli viola player and teacher, she has performed as soloist with many orchestras worldwide, Rivka Golani turns 80…
Senior principal of the law firm of Neuberger, Quinn, Gielen, Rubin & Gibber, Isaac M. Neuberger turns 79… One of the principal anchors for CNN, Wolf Blitzer turns 78… Aviation and aerospace professional, Mike Orkin… Founder and executive director at WomenStrong International, Susan Morton Blaustein turns 73… Mayor of the 16th Arrondissement of Paris until 2023, now a member of the upper house of the French Parliament, Francis Szpiner turns 72… Popular musical entertainer in the Orthodox Jewish community, his stage name is Avraham Fried, Avraham Shabsi Friedman turns 67… Director of marketing and communications at Dorot, Andrea Glick… SVP and general counsel at Hertz Corporation until 2014, J. Jeffrey Zimmerman… Chabad rabbi in the Bel Air neighborhood of Los Angeles, he is a frequent guest on “Fox News at Night,” Chaim Mentz… Hedge fund manager, he sold a majority stake in the NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning during 2024 but he continues to control the team, Jeffrey N. Vinik turns 67… Retired Israeli basketball player, she is in the Guinness Book of World Records for the most points (136) ever scored in a women's professional game, Anat Draigor turns 66… Author, journalist, soldier and award-winning defense correspondent who has covered Israel and the Middle East, Arieh O'Sullivan turns 65… Journalist and author, Debra Nussbaum Cohen… Head of real estate for Mansueto Office, Ari Glass… Member of the U.K. Parliament until 2024 as a member of the British Conservative Party, Robert Halfon turns 57… Partner at Mercury Public Affairs, Jonathan Greenspun… SVP at HCA
Healthcare, Jeff E. Cohen… Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, she is a member of Adas Israel, a Conservative Washington synagogue, Judge Neomi Rao turns 53… Internet celebrity, pizza reviewer, blogger and founder of Barstool Sports, David Portnoy turns 49… Visuals editor at The City (dedicated to in-depth local reporting in NYC) and adjunct professor at
CUNY, Ben Fractenberg… VP of communications and public policy at Antora Energy, Adam Perecman Frankel… Founder and CEO of beauty and cosmetic firms Into The Gloss and Glossier, Emily Weiss… Creator of the Yehi Ohr program at Jewish Community Services of South Florida, now a real estate agent, Zisa Levin… Retired MLB first baseman after seven seasons, he starred for Team Israel in the 2017 World Baseball Classic, Isaac Benjamin "Ike" Davis turns 39… Communications director for then-Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT), Sarah Alice Frank Feldman… Energy policy and climate change reporter for Politico, Joshua Adam Siegel… Director of the Dan David Prize (an international award headquartered at Tel Aviv University), Charlotte Hallé… Director of communications at the U.K.'s Department of Energy Security and Net Zero, James Sorene… Beatrice Stein...
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