Daily Kickoff
Good Wednesday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we look at how Jewish Democrats are approaching the Trump administration’s detention of anti-Israel activists, and report on the anti-Zionist speakers at a recent antisemitism conference at UCLA that was sponsored by pro-Israel groups including the Anti-Defamation League and the Academic Engagement Network. We also spotlight a new organization in Missouri that seeks to fight antisemitism in state and local politics, and look at how Joe Kent’s skepticism of U.S. strikes on Houthi targets could affect efforts to confirm him to lead the National Counterterrorism Center. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Tom Barrack, Noa Tishby and Naftali Bennett.
What We’re Watching
- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu heads to Budapest, Hungary, tonight for several days of meetings with senior Hungarian officials, including Prime Minister Viktor Orbán. He’ll return to Israel on Sunday.
- The House Armed Services Committee is holding a subcommittee hearing today on U.S. military efforts to counter drone systems.
- AIPAC CEO Elliot Brandt will testify at a House Appropriations Committee hearing today focused on national security.
- The Atlantic Council is holding an event this morning focused on the shifting Middle East landscape in the second Trump administration. Speakers include the Council on Foreign Relations’ Steven Cook, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy’s Soner Cagaptay, former State Department official Jennifer Gavito and the Atlantic Council’s William Wechsler.
- The Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh is hosting back-to-back sit-downs this evening with Pittsburgh Mayor Ed Gainey and County Controller Corey O’Connor. O’Connor is mounting a primary challenge against Gainey in the city’s mayoral election.
- Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who is running in the New York City mayoral race, is slated to speak at the Hamptons Synagogue this afternoon, a day after he gave an address on antisemitism at a New York City synagogue.
- The European Commission is holding its second annual Civil Society Forum on Combating Antisemitism and Fostering Jewish Life in Brussels.
What You Should Know
The Democratic-backed Wisconsin Supreme Court justice candidate comfortably prevailed, while Democrats significantly narrowed typical GOP margins in two conservative Florida congressional districts in Tuesday’s elections — a sign that the political environment may be turning against President Donald Trump, Jewish Insider Editor-in-Chief Josh Kraushaar writes.
The most significant result took place in Wisconsin, where Democratic-backed Dane County circuit Judge Susan Crawford easily dispatched GOP-backed Waukesha County circuit Judge Brad Schimel, preserving liberals’ 4-3 advantage.
Even though the race was ostensibly nonpartisan, outside liberal and conservative groups poured in nearly $90 million into the swing-state contest — with billionaire Trump advisor Elon Musk spending huge sums of money and campaigning for Schimel in the closing week of the campaign. Musk, who said the “future of civilization” was at stake based on the Wisconsin results, also emerged as the Democrats’ foil to turn out anti-Trump voters to the polls in the off-year contest.
With most of the vote counted, Crawford holds a 10-point advantage over Schimel in a state in which President Donald Trump eked out a one-point victory last November.
That double-digit swing towards Democrats is also consistent with the Florida results, where Democrats made significant inroads in ruby-red districts where Trump won by commanding margins last year.
Republican state Sen. Randy Fine dispatched Democrat Josh Weil in Florida’s 6th Congressional District, and will become the fourth Jewish Republican to serve in the current Congress. Republicans expressed public concern about the race over the last week — in a district that Trump carried by 30 points — but Fine ultimately prevailed by a 14-point margin.
The seat was previously held by Republican Mike Waltz, currently serving as Trump’s national security advisor.
In Florida’s 1st Congressional District, spanning the state’s conservative Panhandle, Republican Jimmy Patronis, the state’s chief financial officer, defeated Democrat Gay Valimont by a 15-point margin. By comparison, Trump carried the district by 37 points last year, which is an even bigger underperformance for Republicans.
With Trump’s tariffs raising economic anxieties, aggressive government cuts drawing pushback and a foreign policy that’s burned relationships with allies in short order, the new GOP administration has spent much of his political capital in just over two months in office.
Tuesday’s returns likely serve as a big, flashing red light from voters cautioning Trump to slow things down — or else risk facing a more consequential backlash down the line.
deportation divisions
In embracing deported pro-Palestinian activists, Democrats struggle to acknowledge antisemitism

When ICE agents detained Columbia University graduate Mahmoud Khalil in March, the start of an escalating Trump administration effort to deport foreign students deemed sympathetic to Hamas, some Jewish Democrats were concerned. Like President Donald Trump, they were worried about antisemitism on campus and took issue with Khalil’s leadership of Columbia’s anti-Israel encampment last spring. But they feared that deporting a green card holder for his activism would raise issues about due process and freedom of expression, Jewish Insider’s Gabby Deutch reports.
Lack of nuance: Most of the messages from senior Democratic leaders have failed to acknowledge Jewish Democrats’ real concerns about antisemitism and campus protests, even if many of them, too, are unhappy with the deportations. “I think it’s fair to say that, on the one hand, I think a lot of American Jews are troubled by what Trump is doing, and at the same time, they’re not feeling well-supported by Democrats,” said one longtime Democratic operative. Making a strong argument against Trump’s deportations — actions he says are meant to fight antisemitism and rid the U.S. of Hamas sympathizers — requires Democrats to clean house of extremist elements that have supported those protests, according to Jon Reinish, a public affairs executive and former Democratic congressional staffer. “A start would be making it crystal clear that they categorically reject those who have targeted, threatened and terrorized Jews on college campuses and that they reject fringe factions of the party, like the DSA [Democratic Socialists of America], who have trafficked in Jew-hatred for years and have exploited and encouraged it for their own warped political purposes,” Reinish said. “Without that moral clarity, trust will continue to be less strong than it could be.”