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Cuomo dominates Jewish vote in new poll, as Israeli TV pillories Mamdani

This piece first ran as part of The Countdown, our daily newsletter rounding up all the developments in the New York City mayor’s race. Sign up here to get it in your inbox. There are 5 days to the election.

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🤝 Jewish petitions continue to fly

  • Over 200 rabbis and hundreds other American Jews have signed a new open letter rejecting Jewish criticism of Zohran Mamdani’s pro-Palestinian views, in the latest sign of deep fissures roiling both clergy and congregants over the mayoral race.

  • “In response to Jewish concerns about the New York mayoral race, we recognize that candidate Zohran Mamdani’s support for Palestinian self-determination stems not from hate, but from his deep moral convictions,” said the group.

  • The letter did not endorse Mamdani and said the signatories had “areas where we may disagree,” but advocated “working across differences” amid rising antisemitism and Islamophobia and said that “Jewish safety cannot be built on Muslim vulnerability.”

  • This letter titled “Jews for a Shared Future” comes a week after another letter from a coalition of rabbis calling themselves the “Jewish Majority,” who denounced Mamdani and the “political normalization” of anti-Zionism. That letter has now topped 1,150 signatories, including hundreds in New York City, and has divided congregations.

  • Rhetoric surrounding the mayoral race has grown increasingly heated in congregations across the country. Las Vegas Rabbi Felipe Goodman, who signed the “Jewish Majority” letter, recently compared Mamdani supporters to Jews who aligned themselves with Hitler before World War II for self-preservation, according to The New York Times.

  • “We have been very intimidated over speaking about politics for the longest time. The gloves have to come off now,” said Goodman, adding, “If people have a problem with me saying that, they do not belong in the same space as me.”

  • Marc Schneier, a prominent rabbi of the Hampton Synagogue and friend of Mamdani’s rival Andrew Cuomo, rejected claims that Islamophobia significantly influenced the backlash to Mamdani in a New York Daily News op-ed published Wednesday.

  • “Throughout my more than two decades of building bridges between Jews and Muslims across the Arab and Muslim world, I can tell you that Mamdani’s views on Israel are not only out of touch with Judaism, but they are out of step with the broader Islamic leadership,” said Schneier.

📊 Numbers to know

  • Cuomo dominates Jewish voters in the last Quinnipiac poll before Election Day. The poll predicted him winning 60% of Jews, trailed by 16% for Mamdani and 12% for Sliwa.

  • Quinnipiac found that 75% of Jewish voters had an unfavorable opinion of Mamdani and 50% had an unfavorable opinion of Cuomo, suggesting that many Jewish Cuomo voters may be motivated by disliking Mamdani more than they dislike Cuomo.

  • The survey lined up with others that show Mamdani winning the race with a narrowing lead. It found Mamdani gaining 43% support, followed by 33% for Cuomo and 14% for Sliwa, with 6% undecided.

  • Quinnipiac polled 911 likely voters from Oct. 23-27, with an error margin of 4%.

  • While other polls have predicted Cuomo winning the Jewish vote, his margin varies widely. A recent Fox News poll gave him just a 4-point advantage, winning 42% of Jewish voters to Mamdani’s 38%.

  • Another new poll from Marist shows Mamdani with a 16-point lead. It did not break out results for Jewish voters.

🕍 Cuomo cancels on synagogue

  • Cuomo canceled a town hall at Congregation Beth Elohim, a Reform synagogue in Park Slope, three hours before it was set to take place on Tuesday.

  • CBE previously hosted Mamdani and Republican Curtis Sliwa to take questions from New York Jews. Mamdani’s appearance was protested by dozens of congregants and pro-Israel activists.

  • While the reasoning for his cancellation was unclear, around the time of his scheduled CBE appearance, Cuomo’s X account posted photos of him canvassing in the Bronx earlier in the day and reposted a tweet about falsified criticism by Bill de Blasio of Mamdani.

  • The cancellation appeared to have disrupted the plans of parents whose children attend CBE’s after school program, according to a since-deleted post on X by Mattan Berner-Kadish, who teaches Hebrew at CBE.

  • “I work at a synagogue that both Sliwa/ Mamdani spoke at,” wrote Berner-Kadish. “Today, two hours before Cuomo’s turn, with us already having cancelled class, he cancelled! congregants who wanted to hear something to allow them to excuse his horrible history got ghosted instead lol.”

🏆 Endorsement tracker

  • Billionaire former Mayor Michael Bloomberg endorsed Cuomo and pumped $1.5 million into a super PAC supporting his campaign Wednesday in a last-minute push to help Cuomo beat Mamdani.

  • “Being Mayor of New York City is the second toughest job in America, and the next mayor will face immense challenges,” Bloomberg said on X with a photo of him wearing an early voter sticker. “Andrew Cuomo has the experience and toughness to stand up for New Yorkers and get things done.”

  • Bloomberg previously endorsed Cuomo during the Democratic primary, when he also spent $8 million on a pro-Cuomo PAC. He later met with Mamdani over the summer after Mamdani’s primary victory. Bloomberg differs with Mamdani dramatically on several issues, as a moderate and longtime defender of Israel.

  • A panel of 14 New Yorkers convened by the New York Times Opinion board endorsed Mamdani for mayor. Before the June primary, the panel chose Brad Lander for the Democratic nominee and had Cuomo, Mamdani and former hedge fund executive Whitney Tilson tied for second place.

✍ Orthodox leaders weigh in

  • The Satmar political committee, representing an ultra-Orthodox Hasidic community in Brooklyn, said it would not endorse a candidate in a statement on Wednesday.

  • The group also said, “We feel compelled to distance ourselves from the irresponsible scare campaign and incitement against Zohran Mamdani.”

  • The statement decried “false and dangerous” portrayals of Mamdani as hostile to Jews. The Satmars prioritize keeping their religious ways of life free from regulation by local governments.

  • On the same day, Cuomo and Mayor Eric Adams met with Satmar leaders in hopes of earning their support.

📺 TV attacks on Mamdani

  • Benj Irby, a host on the right-wing TV channel Newsmax, compared Jewish supporters of Mamdani to “chickens for KFC” and “cows for McDonalds” because of what he called Mamdani’s “ties to extremists.”

  • Irby added, “The promise of free stuff makes Jews forget that he’s an extremist.”

  • The Israeli comedy show “Eretz Nehederet” also targeted Mamdani on Wednesday. In a sketch featuring the parody of a Mamdani ad, an actor playing Mamdani wished viewers “Intifada Tova” instead of “Shana Tova,” sang “Nagil Jihada” instead of “Hava Nagila” and praised “Hamas” instead of “hummus.”


The post Cuomo dominates Jewish vote in new poll, as Israeli TV pillories Mamdani appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Remembering Abe Foxman, the longtime ADL leader known as the ‘Jewish pope,’ who always answered my calls

Friday before sundown, I realized that Abe Foxman had not sent me his weekly “Shabbat Shalom” message. For the past seven years, since we began texting regularly about Jewish and political issues, the message would arrive each Friday like clockwork — often accompanied by screenshots of Shabbat memes. My response never changed: “Good Shabbos, tzaddik,” using the Hebrew word for a righteous person that Foxman himself often used.

A few minutes after sundown, I texted him anyway: “Good Shabbos, tzaddik.” Then I turned off my phone. The message showed as “read” Saturday night. But there was no response.

I’m sure I wasn’t the only one waiting for Foxman’s Shabbat greetings. The silence said everything. On Sunday, the Anti-Defamation League announced that its former longtime chief had died at age 86.

I first started texting with Foxman after he stepped down in 2015 as national director of the ADL, concluding a remarkable 50-year run with the organization, including nearly three decades at its helm. By then, he had become one of the most recognizable Jewish communal leaders in America. He was nicknamed the “Jewish Pope.” Former President Barack Obama, a frequent target of Foxman’s criticism over Israel policy, said upon Foxman’s retirement: “Abe is irreplaceable.”

For me, a rookie journalist covering national politics through a Jewish lens, Foxman became an invaluable source. He was in the room with presidents, prime ministers and world leaders during some of the Jewish community’s most consequential moments. Yet he was always available. He answered calls quickly. He texted back. He spoke candidly. He could be sharp, direct and deeply critical when he thought leaders were making mistakes. But he was also compassionate, warm and surprisingly personal.

Every conversation began the same way: asking about me. My kids. How I was holding up. Only then would we get to politics. The conversation would often veer from Yiddish to English and back again.

Our last conversation was on April 15, after a record 40 Senate Democrats voted to block $295 million for the transfer of bulldozers to Israel and 36 of them also supported a measure to block the sale of 1,000-pound bombs to the Jewish state. “A broch,” Foxman replied, using the Yiddish word for disaster. “A sad time for American politics.”

That worldview shaped much of his public commentary in recent years. In interviews with the Forward and other publications, Foxman weighed in on rising antisemitism, campus protests, Democratic divisions over Israel, President Donald Trump’s rhetoric, and the Biden-Netanyahu relationship.

Foxman could be combative and unapologetic. Critics on the left viewed him as too hawkish on Israel, while critics on the right sometimes accused him of being too willing to criticize the Israeli government or American conservatives. But nobody doubted his commitment to the Jewish people and to Israel.

Jacob Kornbluh and Abe Foxman ay the 2023 White House Hanukkah party. Courtesy of Jacob Kornbluh

Foxman’s own life story

Born in Baranavichy in 1940, in what is now Belarus, Foxman survived the Holocaust as an infant after being hidden by his Polish Catholic nanny, who baptized him to hide his Jewish identity, while his parents were confined to a ghetto. After the war, he was reunited with his parents, first living in a displaced persons camp in Austria before immigrating to the United States.

Those early experiences shaped the course of his career and ultimately made him one of the most influential Jewish communal leaders of the modern era.

In 1965, after getting degrees from City College of New York and New York University School of Law, Foxman joined the Anti-Defamation League as a legal assistant. Over the next five decades, Foxman rose through the ranks of the organization before being named its national director in 1987, a position he held until 2015.

Under his leadership, the ADL became one of the world’s most prominent voices combating antisemitism and hate.

In 1987, President Ronald Reagan appointed Foxman to serve on the council of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. He was reappointed by Presidents George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Joe Biden. He was also vice chairman of the Museum of Jewish Heritage in New York City.

Foxman was often willing to challenge leaders he believed were wrong on Israel, including Democratic presidents he otherwise respected. He was sharply critical of Obama’s approach toward Israel early in his presidency and became one of the leading Jewish voices opposing the administration’s 2009 demand for a freeze on Israeli settlements.

In remarks at Foxman’s farewell dinner in 2015, Susan Rice, former U.S. ambassador to the U.N. and national security advisor under Obama, told the audience: “The thing I most value about Abe is his candor and integrity. He holds everyone to the same high standards, and I can always count on him to tell it to me straight, even when he knows I won’t necessarily like what he has to say.” In 2020, Foxman publicly advocated for Biden to choose Rice as his vice-presidential running mate.

“America and the Jewish people have lost a moral voice, a passionate advocate for the Jewish people and the state of Israel, and a remarkable leader,” Foxman’s successor, ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt, said in a statement announcing Foxman’s death.

Foxman’s political commentary

Even after retiring from the ADL, Foxman remained a leading voice in Jewish public life, especially after the election of Trump in 2016.

Foxman told me in an interview at the time that the Jewish community should engage with Trump and hold him accountable when needed. He advised Trump to be cautious about making good on his promise to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. He became more critical of Trump after the president said that there were “very fine people on both sides” in response to a 2017 neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

In 2020, Foxman broke his tradition of not endorsing political candidates to back Biden. He argued that Trump was a “demagogue” whose reelection would be a “body blow for our country and our community.”

Once Biden took office, Foxman started to express doubts about the president’s handling of the U.S. relationship with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He said it “sends the wrong message to our friends and enemies” that Israel is being held to a higher standard than other countries in the region. Foxman was also a harsh critic of the Netanyahu government’s judicial overhaul, warning that the right-wing cabinet ministers could hamper support for Israel among American Jews.

In 2024, he warned that Biden’s increasingly harsh rhetoric over Israel’s military campaign in Gaza would repel Jewish voters. “I believe that this administration, because of its political season, is taking American Jews for granted or has written us off,” said Foxman. ”If they’re worried that the Arabs in Michigan will vote with their feet, they need to worry that Jews can also vote with their feet.”

Most recently, Foxman was critical of national Democrats opposing the military operations against the Iranian regime in March for a lack of congressional authority. “Sadly, it is purely political games,” Foxman told me, noting that previous Democratic administrations conducted military operations without explicit congressional authorization. “Ninety-nine percent of Democrats are on record saying Iran is a terrorist state and cannot have nuclear weapons. So why this game?” he asked.

Now, as Jews mark Jewish American Heritage Month, that voice is silent. But for me, and for the many people still waiting for one more “Shabbat Shalom” message from Foxman, he will not soon be forgotten.

Foxman is survived by his wife Golda, his daughters Michelle and Ariel and four grandchildren.

JTA contributed to this article.

The post Remembering Abe Foxman, the longtime ADL leader known as the ‘Jewish pope,’ who always answered my calls appeared first on The Forward.

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Jailed Iranian Peace Laureate Mohammadi Moved to Hospital in Tehran

A picture of Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi on the wall of the Grand Hotel in central Oslo before the Nobel banquet, in connection with the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize 2023, in Oslo, Norway, Dec. 10, 2023. Photo: NTB/Javad Parsa via REUTERS

Iran’s imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize winner Narges Mohammadi has been moved to a hospital in the capital, Tehran, and has been granted a suspension of her sentence on heavy bail, a foundation run by her family said on Sunday.

Mohammadi, 54, won the ‌prize in 2023 while in prison for a campaign to advance women’s rights and abolish the death penalty. She suffered a heart attack two weeks ago.

Her family had called for her to be transferred from Zanjan, northwest of Tehran, where she was serving her sentence and where she had been initially taken to a hospital, so that she could receive better medical care.

She is now at Tehran Pars Hospital for treatment by her own medical team after being transferred by ambulance, the Narges Mohammadi Foundation said ⁠in a statement.

Mohammadi was sentenced to a new prison term of 7-1/2 ​years, the foundation said in February, weeks ​before the ⁠US and Israel launched their war against Iran. The Nobel committee at the time called on Tehran to free her immediately.

She ⁠had been arrested in ​December after denouncing the death ​of a lawyer, Khosrow Alikordi. A prosecutor told reporters that she had ​made provocative remarks at Alikordi’s memorial ceremony.

The foundation gave no details of the bail arrangements or suspension of her sentence.

“However, a suspension is not enough,” it said. “Narges Mohammadi requires permanent, specialized care. We must ensure she never returns to prison.”

Iran shut down most of the internet in the country in January as authorities suppressed mass protests triggered by economic unease. Rights groups have reported ongoing ⁠executions of ​people involved in the unrest.

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Israel’s Attorney General Calls to Cancel Netanyahu’s Mossad Chief Appointment

Israeli Attorney-General Gali Baharav-Miara. Photo: Twitter

i24 News –  Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara told the High Court of Justice on Sunday that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s decision to appoint Maj. Gen. Roman Gofman as the next Mossad chief must be canceled.

Baharav-Miara filed her position ahead of a Tuesday hearing on petitions challenging the appointment, telling the court that “substantial flaws” had been found both in the process conducted by the advisory committee and in the conclusions it drew. She said Netanyahu’s decision suffered from “extreme and blatant unreasonableness” and could not stand legally.

At the center of the dispute is the case of Ori Elmakayes, who was a 17-year-old minor when he was activated in 2022 by Division 210, without going through authorized intelligence channels. At the time, the division was commanded by Gofman. Elmakayes was arrested in May 2022 under espionage charges after two officers sent him classified information and told him to post it online as part of an “influence campaign,” despite not being authorized to do so. Gofman initiated this operation. Elmakayes was then held in full detention until July, spending an extended period under electronic monitoring and house arrest before the indictment against him was canceled in late 2023.

Baharav-Miara says Gofman’s involvement in leaking the classified information to the minor, “casts a heavy shadow on Gofman’s integrity and thus on his appointment to head the Mossad.” The attorney general also identified serious procedural failings in the advisory committee’s work. She notes that the majority members signed their opinion before committee chairman and former Supreme Court president Asher Grunis had written his dissent and before two members had reviewed several classified documents significant to the full picture. Grunis concluded that integrity flaws had been found and that it was not appropriate to appoint Gofman as Mossad chief.

The attorney general also says the committee failed to hear directly from Elmakayes or from a relevant senior military intelligence officer, instead relying in part on media interviews.

Netanyahu, who appointed Gofman to head the Mossad starting in early June, for a five-year term, submitted his own response to the court on this past Friday, arguing that the decision fell within his executive authority. The Prime Minister also said that his assessment of the matter was “dozens of times superior” to that of the court, adding that Gofman’s integrity was “found pure,” and describing him as the most qualified candidate.

Other coalition figures responded to the attorney general with sharp criticism, including National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. Ben-Gvir accused Baharav-Miara of fighting the state, while Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said her position was “one step too far” and vowed to advance legislation splitting the attorney general’s role in the Knesset’s summer session.

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