Daily Kickoff
Good Friday morning!
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we talk to Cornell’s new president, Michael Kotlikoff, a week into his new role, and report on the University of Michigan’s shuttering of its DEI offices. We also cover yesterday’s Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee hearing, during which Sen. Bill Cassidy announced an investigation into American Muslims for Palestine, and report on past comments made by a surging Democratic congressional candidate in next week’s special elections in Florida who has called for an end to U.S. aid to Israel. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Sylvan Adams, Omer Wenkert and Danny Wolf.
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: All about ‘Qatargate,’ the scandal roiling Israeli politics; Jewish social service agencies brace for federal funding cuts amid uncertainty; and In Israel, Fetterman slams party’s ‘pandering’ to far left in face of ‘reality’ on the ground. Print the latest edition here.
What We’re Watching
- The J.P. Morgan Tech Summit began yesterday in Big Sky, Mont. A number of Trump administration officials, including Elon Musk, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and David Sacks, the White House’s AI and crypto czar, are slated to speak, as are Jared and Josh Kushner, San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie and former NFL quarterback Tom Brady.
- Rep. Greg Meeks (D-NY) is expected to endorse former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is mounting a primary challenge to New York City Mayor Eric Adams, this weekend. Meeks opted against endorsing City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, whom he backed for her current role in 2021, who is also challenging Mayor Adams.
What You Should Know
A newly announced Senate investigation into a pro-Palestinian advocacy group with alleged ties to Hamas is casting a spotlight on its little-known role in fomenting anti-Israel demonstrations that roiled college campuses across the country in the wake of the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks, Jewish Insider’s Matthew Kassel reports.
But while the high-profile investigation marks the first time the Senate has probed American Muslims for Palestine — the nonprofit group whose activities have faced mounting scrutiny since Hamas’ attacks — it is the latest inquiry in a widening series of legal challenges targeting the secretive organization.
AMP’s behind-the-scenes efforts fueling protests over Israel’s war in Gaza, including providing support to the pro-Hamas group Students for Justice in Palestine — whose national umbrella was created by AMP’s chairman, Hatem Bazian — have contributed to a growing number of lawsuits that are collectively pushing the Virginia-based nonprofit organization into a defensive crouch and ultimately threatening its dismantlement.
In Virginia, for instance, the Republican attorney general, Jason Miyares, launched an investigation into AMP shortly after the Oct. 7 attacks for allegedly “providing support to terrorist organizations” such as Hamas, which the group has denied. In January, he filed a petition in a Richmond court that seeks to enforce a judge’s order for AMP to turn over closely guarded financial records that could help shed light on its donor network, which the group has long kept closely guarded.
Meanwhile, AMP is facing a civil lawsuit in Virginia filed last year on behalf of numerous survivors and family members of the Oct. 7 attacks, which accuses the group of providing material support for Hamas.
And in Chicago, a long-gestating lawsuit is working to establish that AMP is an “alter ego” of a now-defunct group, the Islamic Association for Palestine, which was found liable for aiding Hamas. The suit, which could head to trial later this year, is now seeking to collect a $156 million judgment IAP never paid to the family members of David Boim, an American killed by Hamas in a 1996 terrorist attack in the West Bank.
Daniel Schlessinger, the lead attorney in the Boim case, said his lawsuit requires a different burden of proof than those against AMP in Virginia because it does not need to show the group provided material support for Hamas. “All we have to do is prove AMP is essentially the same organization as IAP,” he told JI. Top officials at AMP, many of whom have ties to Hamas, were affiliated with IAP, which shuttered in 2004.
“I think we have a very strong case on the facts and I would like to say on the law,” Schlessinger said in an interview on Thursday. “We have a ton of evidence.”
The Senate probe announced on Thursday by the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, Schlessinger speculated, will likely help “strengthen the case that AMP, like IAP, is a supporter of Hamas through campus activities.”
Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-LA), who chairs the committee and sent a letter to Bazian on Wednesday evening, said on Thursday he would be “demanding answers about” AMP’s “activities on college campuses,” adding that the “group’s leaders have ties to Hamas and helped create” National SJP years ago.
Even as AMP faces heightened pressure from the federal government, Christina Jump, an attorney for the group, told JI on Thursday that she would “continue to look forward to the opportunities to show” the group “abides by and within the law.”
Jump confirmed that AMP received the letter from Cassidy on Wednesday and “will of course respond timely and in accordance with all applicable laws.”
campus chat
New Cornell president says, despite scrutiny from Washington, students ‘have seen a pretty normal semester’

Michael Kotlikoff was tapped as Cornell University president on March 21 at a fraught moment for elite universities, as some have come under scrutiny from the Trump administration for what officials have alleged is a failure to address rising incidents of antisemitism on campus. The Ithaca, N.Y., Ivy League campus received warning this month from the Department of Education that it is under investigation for allowing antisemitic discrimination and risks losing funding cuts. One week into his new role, Kotlikoff sat down with Jewish Insider’s Haley Cohen to share his plans — and what he believes sets Cornell apart at a time of intense inspection among Ivy Leagues.
Post-Oct. 7 landscape: “One of the things I have tried to do is be very clear up-front — something that we didn’t really have the opportunity to do prior to Oct. 7 — how we were going to meet protests,” Kotlikoff told JI. “I said at the beginning of the year that we were going to fully support free expression and students’ First Amendment rights. That is critical for a university campus. However, when those expressive activities or expressions of speech begin to infringe on the rights of others by preventing others from hearing a speaker or from closing down a career fair, there will be consequences. That is not expressing your own First Amendment rights, it’s infringing on others’ rights. We were very clear about that and have followed through.”
Elsewhere: At a time when some elite universities are acquiescing to the Trump administration’s demands to crack down on antisemitic activity on campus, Georgetown University is pushing back by issuing statements supportive of a university professor and postdoctoral scholar who was detained by federal authorities last week for his reported affiliations with Hamas, JI’s Haley Cohen reports.