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In a shift, Democrats are focusing their Jewish campaign on Israel policy

WASHINGTON (JTA) — Democrats are emphasizing President Joe Biden’s pro-Israel chops in their campaign for Jewish votes, a twist for a party that has long made domestic policy front and center in its efforts to get out the Jewish vote.
An online ad released by the Jewish Democratic Council of America released Monday contrasts Biden’s visit to Israel early in its war with Hamas against former President Donald Trump’s recent mocking of Israel’s leadership for mishandling the war and his praise for Hezbollah. The video is entitled “President Biden: The leader the world needs.”
“Trump turned his back on Israel,” the narrator says. “Joe Biden is a steadfast friend and supporter of Israel and defender of American Jews.” The ad will target Jewish voters in Nevada, Georgia, Arizona and Pennsylvania, all swing states with relatively substantial Jewish communities.
On Friday, the Democratic National Committee took a similar tack on a press call ahead of the Republican Jewish Coalition’s annual conference. The RJC conference featured speeches by eight presidential candidates, including Trump, whom polls show to be the strong frontrunner.
“Donald Trump is a disaster for American Jews and for Israel,” U.S. Rep. Jake Auchincloss, a Jewish Massachusetts Democrat, said on the DNC call. Auchincloss, a military veteran, referred to military officials who worked for Trump in his first term who said they stopped him from making dangerous decisions. “He is dangerous for the security of Israel and his ascension to a second term in office would make our closest ally in the Middle East less secure and make American Jews less safe.”
Democrats, who continue to garner between two thirds and three quarters of the Jewish vote in national elections, traditionally have focused their Jewish campaigns on domestic issues, reflecting the party’s common ground with many American Jews on issues like government-subsided health care, abortion rights and immigration policy.
In the Trump years, another emphasis has been the former president’s alliances with the far right, including some notorious antisemites.
Republicans have long made Israel the premier issue in their campaigning among Jews, in part because for decades Israel has been led by right-leaning governments more in sync with Republican foreign policy.
Trump especially pleased the right-wing pro-Israel community with his taboo-shattering policies, including moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem, cutting of funding to the Palestinians and pulling out of the Iran nuclear deal. Republicans also have singled out for attack a small but growing group of progressives in Congress who are sharply critical of Israel.
Those dynamics appear to be changing. Biden’s unabashed support for Israel since Hamas’ deadly Oct. 7 invasion stood in contrast to congressional Republicans who were distracted by a bruising House leadership battle that delayed the passage of a resolution standing with Israel and the delivery of emergency defense assistance to Israel. Some Republicans and political conservatives were moved to praise Biden.
“The contrast of leadership in this moment of crisis could not be more stark,” JDCA’s CEO, Halie Soifer, said in a statement. “Joe Biden has stood unequivocally with Israel and American Jews, while Donald Trump mocked Israel and praised terrorists.”
At the RJC conference, leading Jewish Republicans said Trump would easily withstand Democratic attacks on his Israel record, arguing that his actions were louder than his words.
“I am so looking forward to having this debate about who stands better with Israel and who’s got a better record,” the RJC CEO, Matt Brooks, said at a press gathering. “And I will put Donald Trump’s record over Joe Biden. I will put Nikki Haley’s record over Joe Biden’s.”
Haley, Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations , is running for president and also spoke at the RJC conference.
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The post In a shift, Democrats are focusing their Jewish campaign on Israel policy appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
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Israel to Issue 54,000 Call-Up Notices to Ultra-Orthodox Students

Haredi Jewish men look at the scene of an explosion at a bus stop in Jerusalem, Israel, on Nov. 23, 2022. Photo: Reuters/Ammar Awad
Israel’s military said it would issue 54,000 call-up notices to ultra-Orthodox Jewish seminary students following a Supreme Court ruling mandating their conscription and amid growing pressure from reservists stretched by extended deployments.
The Supreme Court ruling last year overturned a decades-old exemption for ultra-Orthodox students, a policy established when the community comprised a far smaller segment of the population than the 13 percent it represents today.
Military service is compulsory for most Israeli Jews from the age of 18, lasting 24-32 months, with additional reserve duty in subsequent years. Members of Israel’s 21 percent Arab population are mostly exempt, though some do serve.
A statement by the military spokesperson confirmed the orders on Sunday just as local media reported legislative efforts by two ultra-Orthodox parties in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition to craft a compromise.
The exemption issue has grown more contentious as Israel’s armed forces in recent years have faced strains from simultaneous engagements with Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Houthis in Yemen, and Iran.
Ultra-Orthodox leaders in Netanyahu’s brittle coalition have voiced concerns that integrating seminary students into military units alongside secular Israelis, including women, could jeopardize their religious identity.
The military statement promised to ensure conditions that respect the ultra-Orthodox way of life and to develop additional programs to support their integration into the military. It said the notices would go out this month.
The post Israel to Issue 54,000 Call-Up Notices to Ultra-Orthodox Students first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Influential Far-Right Minister Lashes out at Netanyahu Over Gaza War Policy

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich attends an inauguration event for Israel’s new light rail line for the Tel Aviv metropolitan area, in Petah Tikva, Israel, Aug. 17, 2023. Photo: REUTERS/Amir Cohen
Israel’s far-right Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich sharply criticized on Sunday a cabinet decision to allow some aid into Gaza as a “grave mistake” that he said would benefit the terrorist group Hamas.
Smotrich also accused Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of failing to ensure that Israel’s military is following government directives in prosecuting the war against Hamas in Gaza. He said he was considering his “next steps” but stopped short of explicitly threatening to quit the coalition.
Smotrich’s comments come a day before Netanyahu is due to hold talks in Washington with President Donald Trump on a US-backed proposal for a 60-day Gaza ceasefire.
“… the cabinet and the Prime Minister made a grave mistake yesterday in approving the entry of aid through a route that also benefits Hamas,” Smotrich said on X, arguing that the aid would ultimately reach the Islamist group and serve as “logistical support for the enemy during wartime”.
The Israeli government has not announced any changes to its aid policy in Gaza. Israeli media reported that the government had voted to allow additional aid to enter northern Gaza.
The prime minister’s office did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment. The military declined to comment.
Israel accuses Hamas of stealing aid for its own fighters or to sell to finance its operations, an accusation Hamas denies. Gaza is in the grip of a humanitarian catastrophe, with conditions threatening to push nearly a half a million people into famine within months, according to U.N. estimates.
Israel in May partially lifted a nearly three-month blockade on aid. Two Israeli officials said on June 27 the government had temporarily stopped aid from entering north Gaza.
PRESSURE
Public pressure in Israel is mounting on Netanyahu to secure a permanent ceasefire, a move opposed by some hardline members of his right-wing coalition. An Israeli team left for Qatar on Sunday for talks on a possible Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal.
Smotrich, who in January threatened to withdraw his Religious Zionism party from the government if Israel agreed to a complete end to the war before having achieved its objectives, did not mention the ceasefire in his criticism of Netanyahu.
The right-wing coalition holds a slim parliamentary majority, although some opposition lawmakers have offered to support the government from collapsing if a ceasefire is agreed.
The post Influential Far-Right Minister Lashes out at Netanyahu Over Gaza War Policy first appeared on Algemeiner.com.
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Australia Police Charge Man Over Alleged Arson on Melbourne Synagogue

Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese speaks to the media during a press conference with New Zealand’s Prime Minister Christopher Luxon at the Australian Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, Aug. 16, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Tracey Nearmy
Australian police have charged a man in connection with an alleged arson attack on a Melbourne synagogue with worshippers in the building, the latest in a series of incidents targeting the nation’s Jewish community.
There were no injuries to the 20 people inside the East Melbourne Synagogue, who fled from the fire on Friday night. Firefighters extinguished the blaze in the capital of Victoria state.
Australia has experienced several antisemitic incidents since the start of the Israel-Gaza war in October 2023.
Counter-terrorism detectives late on Saturday arrested the 34-year-old resident of Sydney, capital of neighboring New South Wales, charging him with offenses including criminal damage by fire, police said.
“The man allegedly poured a flammable liquid on the front door of the building and set it on fire before fleeing the scene,” police said in a statement.
The suspect, whom the authorities declined to identify, was remanded in custody after his case was heard at Melbourne Magistrates Court on Sunday and no application was made for bail, the Australian Broadcasting Corp reported.
Authorities are investigating whether the synagogue fire was linked to a disturbance on Friday night at an Israeli restaurant in Melbourne, in which one person was arrested for hindering police.
The restaurant was extensively damaged, according to the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, an umbrella group for Australia’s Jews.
It said the fire at the synagogue, one of Melbourne’s oldest, was set as those inside sat down to Sabbath dinner.
Israeli President Isaac Herzog went on X to “condemn outright the vile arson attack targeting Jews in Melbourne’s historic and oldest synagogue on the Sabbath, and on an Israeli restaurant where people had come to enjoy a meal together”.
“This is not the first such attack in Australia in recent months. But it must be the last,” Herzog said.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the incidents as “severe hate crimes” that he viewed “with utmost gravity.” “The State of Israel will continue to stand alongside the Australian Jewish community,” Netanyahu said on X.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese late on Saturday described the alleged arson, which comes seven months after another synagogue in Melbourne was targeted by arsonists, as shocking and said those responsible should face the law’s full force.
“My Government will provide all necessary support toward this effort,” Albanese posted on X.
Homes, schools, synagogues and vehicles in Australia have been targeted by antisemitic vandalism and arson. The incidents included a fake plan by organized crime to attack a Sydney synagogue using a caravan of explosives in order to divert police resources, police said in March.
The post Australia Police Charge Man Over Alleged Arson on Melbourne Synagogue first appeared on Algemeiner.com.