In D.C…. Trump withdrew his nomination of pro-Israel darling Rep. Elise Stefanik as ambassador to the United Nations, citing a need to maintain Republicans’ very slender majority in the House of Representatives. (JTA)
Vice President JD Vance lashed out against the online publication Jewish Insider after it ran a piece suggesting his comments about Europe in the leaked Signal group chat raised the hackles of some Republican senators. (X)
Washington, D.C., officially banned child marriages following a push led in part by a Jewish organization; now, anyone who wishes to get married in the District will have to be 18 or older. (JTA)
In the rest of the world… The Anti-Defamation League has quietly ended its celebrated anti-bigotry program, A World of Difference, amid a pivot to focus more completely on fighting antisemitism. (Jewish Currents)
Argentina will declassify documents related to the so-called “ratlines” that aided Nazis fleeing Europe for South America after World War II. (Times of Israel)
The British government is following Australia’s lead, and trying to institute new measures to prevent protests in front of houses of worship, and specifically synagogues. (JTA)
The Portland Trailblazers bet big last year on the Israeli basketball star Deni Avdija — and now he’s helping remake the struggling franchise. (Forward)
And in the Middle Ages… If it has ever occurred to you to wonder what opinion your average American might hold of Maimonides, the great 12th-century Torah scholar — and who among us has not asked this exact question? — a new poll holds answers. Twenty-one percent favorability isn’t bad; but the idea that 8% of Americans are walking around with actively poor impressions of the sage is, well, worth pondering. (YouGov)
What else we’re reading ➤ A Jewish graduate student writes: “Columbia expelled me for my Palestine activism, but I won’t be silenced” (The Nation) “Will ICE come to my dorm today?” (The Cut) “Human-rights groups aren’t considering Israel’s side” (The Atlantic) |