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Curtis Sliwa, the Republican candidate, told the frontrunner that “Jews don’t trust that you are going to be there for them when they are the victims of antisemitic attacks.”
“I’m a friend of Israel but not of its current government, and AIPAC’s mission today is to back that government,” said Rep. Seth Moulton, who returned funding from the pro-Israel group.
“Antisemitism is a disease that will not end or diminish due to a ceasefire, because the disease has always been there,” said Spanish journalist and former politician Pilar Rahola.
Some 42% of respondents said they don’t wear or otherwise display identifiable Jewish symbols, up from 26% who said they hid their Jewish identity in a November 2023 AJC poll.
“If this ceasefire falls apart, the fighting starts, that’s going to make it that much harder to find these loved ones and get them out,” Mike Waltz said.
“Portland in this moment cannot be separated from the broader historical context of the militarization that we are embedded in,” one councilor said.
World WIZO chairperson Anita Friedman paid tribute to her as “a courageous and inspiring leader who was the beating heart of WIZO.”
The recent internecine Palestinian killings highlighted the need to move to the next stage of the Trump peace deal, Sharren Haskel told JNS.
The dual British-Israeli citizen and survivor of Hamas captivity called the decision “outrageous” and “blatant antisemitism.”
Pastor Larry Huch senses an “awakening” following the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, which he believes will see renewed support for Israel.
Anthony Lambinus, who is in his upper 30s, is also accused of calling the septuagenarian a “Zionist pig.”
“If Hamas continues to kill people in Gaza, which was not the deal, we will have no choice but to go in and kill them,” the president wrote.