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Republican Jewish Coalition

The group calls the congressman “an unflinching supporter of Israel’s right of self-defense.”
The congresswoman has been holding universities’ feet to the fire over their failures to counter campus antisemitism.
The group said his opponent, Sen. Bob Casey, was “no friend of Israel.”
The group called the congressman “an exemplary defender of our national security and the U.S.-Israel alliance.”
The group calls the nominee “a strong, pro-Israel Republican.”
“Pressuring the Jewish state to make irreversible and potentially perilous long-term diplomatic commitments is a grave failure to live up to America’s proud history of standing with Israel against its deadly enemies.”
All were incumbents except for Mazi Pilip, an Ethiopian-born, Orthodox IDF veteran.
The organization wished the former speaker upon his announcement of retirement at the end of the year.
Pro-Israel advocates from Texas, Florida and New York who work across multiple fields joined the group.
To win social media wars, “take it a battle at a time,” advises the 22-year-old influencer Emily Austin.
Eli Beer described the Republican Jewish Coalition summit as “a night of hope.”
“Any one of them is better than Joe Biden,” Norm Coleman, national chairman of the RJC and a former U.S. senator, told JNS of all the Republican presidential candidates.