
President Donald Trump announced on Thursday that he had tapped Tom Rose, former publisher and CEO of The Jerusalem Post and a close confidant of former Vice President Mike Pence, as the next U.S. ambassador to Poland.
Rose, an Orthodox Jew and a pro-Israel stalwart, has been a personal friend of Pence’s for over three decades and a top advisor going back to his days as governor of Indiana. He served as Pence’s chief strategist and senior advisor during his vice presidency in the first Trump administration. After Trump and Pence left office in 2021, Rose told Jewish Insider that he was engaged in several professional ventures, including newspaper investments and consulting for private equity firms.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had a straightforward message for the 30 Jewish college students and recent graduates he met with on Friday in Washington to hear their concerns about antisemitism: Fight back.
“If you fight, you’ll be respected. If you bow your head, you’ll be despised and not respected. You’ve gotta fight. That’s the most important thing,” Netanyahu told the roundtable of students, who came from universities including Harvard, Georgetown Law School, George Washington University and University of Pennsylvania.

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In one of her first official acts after being sworn in on Wednesday, Attorney General Pam Bondi established a joint task force dedicated to investigating the perpetrators of the Oct. 7 Hamas terror attacks and seeking justice for their victims.
The scope of the body’s work goes beyond the attacks that took place more than a year ago. Bondi described a need to address “the ongoing threat posed by Hamas and its affiliates, both domestically and abroad.”

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A spokesperson for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) said Thursday that the International Criminal Court sanctions that the White House implemented by executive order removes provisions Democrats objected to during Senate negotiations on the sanctions that fell apart last week.
Democrats had been demanding changes to the House-passed ICC sanctions bill to protect U.S. companies, especially technology companies and their foreign subsidiaries, and U.S. allies, from sanctions. They also said they wanted to protect the ICC’s investigation into Russian President Vladimir Putin, which the Biden administration had supported.

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Democratic House lawmakers voted on Thursday, in a long-gestating but still unexpected move, to create a formal Jewish caucus for the first time, launching an official forum for long-standing informal work and discussions among Jewish members of Congress.
The caucus’ formation comes at a time of, and partly in response to, record-high antisemitism in the United States. Leaders say it will help give members a greater and collective voice, as well as a seat at Democratic leadership meetings with other caucuses.

Avi Ohayon/GPO
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu urged Senate leaders to pass legislation sanctioning the International Criminal Court for issuing arrest warrants against him and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, which was blocked by Senate Democrats, in a private meeting on Thursday morning.
Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY), the No. 2 Senate Republican, said that Netanyahu had urged senators to pass the ICC bill and “said it was very important to get that done. Very disappointed that it hadn’t passed, and called specifically on the Democrats to pass the ICC legislation.”

Avi Ohayon (GPO)
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu supports President Donald Trump’s return to a maximum-pressure sanctions campaign and an attempt to reach a nuclear deal with Iran, as long as there is a credible military threat if Iran does not comply, an Israeli diplomatic source told Jewish Insider following the leaders’ meeting in the White House this week.
In the meeting, Netanyahu conveyed to Trump that Israel may take “action” against Iran “if and when there won’t be a choice,” the source said on Thursday.

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As the Trump administration’s Department of Education vows to open investigations into five universities alleged to have discriminated against Jewish students, more than a dozen prominent attorneys are joining together to exclusively litigate against antisemitism on campus and beyond, Jewish Insider has learned.
Called the Center for Legal Innovation (CLI), the new public interest group launched on Thursday will operate under the Louis D. Brandeis Center for Human Rights Under Law Center’s umbrella as an expansion of the group’s current civil rights litigation efforts, much of which have recently focused on representing college students alleging antisemitism on campus.
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