Daily Kickoff
Good Friday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we report on Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s efforts to add the Antisemitism Awareness Act to the NDAA and highlight a Senate Democrats’ proposal to maintain the current funding level for 2025 nonprofit security grants. We talk to GOP senators about former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination to be director of national intelligence and cover Elon Musk’s meeting earlier this week with Iran’s ambassador to the U.N. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Gov. Doug Burgum, David Chalian and Rep. Ritchie Torres.
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: What to watch for in a second Trump administration, At JFNA General Assembly, organizations try to map a path forward at an inflection point and Saudi-Israel normalization appears more distant with a skeptic in Israel’s Foreign Ministry, MBS’ ‘genocide’ accusations. Print the latest edition here.
What We’re Watching
- The Jewish National Fund Global Conference is in full swing today in Dallas. Rabbi David Wolpe will deliver this afternoon’s keynote address on “the future of American Jewry.” (If you’re at the summit tomorrow, catch Jewish Insider’s Haley Cohen in a panel on “Israel and the media.”)
- The Conservative Political Action Alliance (CPAC) is holding its forum at Mar-a-Lago this weekend. Argentinian President Javier Milei spoke at the event last night.
- The Sir Bani Yas International Forum on Peace and Security is taking place this weekend in Abu Dhabi. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is among the foreign diplomats reportedly in attendance.
What You Should Know
Since Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s return to power in 2022, there’s been ongoing tensions between the Biden administration and Jerusalem — most prominently over Israel’s prosecution of the war against Hamas in Gaza.
But in the wake of President-elect Donald Trump’s decisive electoral victory last week, Israel, the broader Middle East and American Jews will soon be dealing with a new administration with vastly different priorities, Jewish Insider’s Executive Editor Melissa Weiss writes.
The changes are not just taking place in the U.S., but also in Israel, where hours before Trump’s victory, Netanyahu fired Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, replacing him with Foreign Minister Israel Katz, a longtime Netanyahu ally who is unlikely to challenge key issues on the prime minister’s agenda, as Gallant did. Days later, Netanyahu announced Yechiel Leiter, who lives in the West Bank settlement of Eli and has ties to numerous right-wing Israeli institutions, as his new envoy to Washington, replacing Amb. Mike Herzog.
The appointment of Katz, who was discharged from the military in 1977, to lead Israel’s wartime defense ministry comes as Netanyahu looks to wind down the war with Hezbollah in Lebanon, amid reports that Israel is aiming to reach a cease-fire before Trump takes office in January.
Trump had said repeatedly on the campaign trail that he wanted to end the conflicts in Ukraine and Israel, adopting a foreign policy that aligns with the MAGA wing of the Republican Party. But it remains unclear whether Netanyahu, who has vowed “total victory” in Gaza since the onset of the war last October, will face constraints as a result of Trump’s desires to wind down the two biggest military conflicts of the moment.
Indications of warm ties between the incoming Trump administration and the Netanyahu government are already on display: Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer was in Mar-a-Lago to meet with Trump on Sunday, and Trump’s selection of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee to be the U.S.’ top diplomat in Israel was met with praise from Israeli coalition members. And according to Israeli Channel 12’s Amit Segal, Trump told an Israeli official that he will cancel any restrictions and delays on arms transfers to Israel.
Jewish communal concerns — focused in large part, but not exclusively, on U.S.-Israel relations since Hamas’ Oct. 7 terror attacks last year — are likely to shift with Trump’s selections of former Reps. Matt Gaetz (R-FL) and Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI) to serve as attorney general and director of national intelligence, respectively.
Will Gaetz, if confirmed, follow the lead of the Biden administration’s attorney general, Merrick Garland, whose Justice Department worked closely with Jewish communities after Oct. 7 on security-related issues and the enforcement of hate crimes legislation? The former Florida congressman had on more than one occasion raised concerns among Jewish communal leaders: his guest to the 2018 State of the Union was a conspiracy theorist and Holocaust denier, and earlier this year, Gaetz voted against the House version of the Antisemitism Awareness Act, calling the legislation a “ridiculous hate speech bill” in a since-deleted tweet.
The nomination of Gaetz, which raised eyebrows among Senate Republicans as well as his former House colleagues, was opposed by both the Anti-Defamation League and the American Jewish Committee, two organizations that rarely weigh in on presidential nominations.
Trump’s nomination of Gabbard drew attention for, among other things, the former congresswoman’s defense of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who used chemical weapons against civilians during the country’s decade-long civil war, and her condemnation of the Trump administration’s killing of Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in 2020.
Jewish leaders have not come out in force against Gabbard’s nomination the way they have for Gaetz. One official at a pro-Israel group told us this week, “Tulsi is a few marbles short of a full set but we are hopeful the marbles she has are blue and white in support of Israel.”
The small shift among Jewish voters toward Trump indicated that there were some reservations about how a Harris White House would handle issues that matter to the Jewish community: security funding, campus antisemitism and the U.S.-Israel relationship.
But while some concerns — such as worries about fraying ties between Jerusalem and Washington — have abated with Trump’s victory, the selections of Gaetz and Gabbard are set to deepen concerns that the politicization of national institutions could hinder the U.S.’ ability to fight terrorism and threats to both Israel and the American Jewish community.
scoop
Schumer moves to add Antisemitism Awareness Act to 2025 defense bill

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) proposed incorporating the Antisemitism Awareness Act into the National Defense Authorization Act as part of negotiations with top congressional leaders, potentially putting the bill on a fast-track to passage, his office told Jewish Insider’s Marc Rod on Thursday.
Stepping on the gas: Senate lawmakers have been discussing the possibility of holding an amendment vote to add the antisemitism bill, which has been stalledin the Senate for months after passing the House, to the National Defense Authorization Act. But Schumer’s move in closed-door talks with the top congressional leadership — known as the four corners — could accelerate that process. If his proposal is approved by the House speaker and the Senate and House minority leaders, the Antisemitism Awareness Act would become part of the must-pass defense and national security policy bill and nearly assured to become law.