U.S. News
The latest news, videos, analysis and opinions on U.S. politics, business, government, society, culture and more. JNS covers breaking stories, features and in-depth reports on Washington, New York and cities and states across America where Jews live.
“Polls fluctuate but the reality is that Israel is fighting a just and moral war against a barbaric enemy,” an AIPAC spokesman told JNS.
The U.N. council “opted for a performative action, designed to draw a veto, that extends Hamas terrorists,” according to Morgan Ortagus, a U.S. diplomat.
“We dodged protests erupting on campus, urging students to vote a certain way,” Joel Harris, a UConn student senator, told JNS.
“The defendant told the assemblyman to go back to Uganda before someone shoots him in the head,” Queens District Attorney Melinda Katz stated.
“The conclusion is inescapable,” the Vermont independent stated.
The lawmakers also said that the frontrunner to be New York City mayor is wrong to support boycotting Israel.
One needn’t wait for the war to end to discuss normalization expectations with Saudi Arabia and others, the former envoy said.
“Ben & Jerry’s has been sidelined for fear of upsetting those in power,” Jewish businessman Jerry Greenfield stated upon quitting his ambassador role.
Graffiti included references to “death to the IDF” and “globalize the intifada.”
An immigration judge ordered Mahmoud Khalil’s deportation to Syria or Algeria, agreeing with the Trump administration that the Columbia graduate’s failure to include pertinent information on his green card application is grounds for revocation.
The department told JNS that it is committed to “reinvigorating” enforcement of a law requiring that U.S. schools report their foreign funding.
USPS held a first-day-of-issue ceremony for an Elie Wiesel stamp at the 92nd Street Y in New York City.