Condemn or court? Bannon appointment a dilemma for Jewish groups seeking access to Trump
Offer an open hand or a closed fist — or maybe both. Name names. Don’t name names, hint. Quietly adjust wording.
Offer an open hand or a closed fist — or maybe both. Name names. Don’t name names, hint. Quietly adjust wording.
President-elect Donald Trump on Tuesday received the blessing of the Peres family, expressing hope that he will maintain strong U.S.-Israel relations.
Ruth Bader Ginsburg said she was looking forward to Donald Trump’s naming of a ninth Supreme Court justice.
President-elect Donald Trump has a complicated history with Jews. On the one hand, his daughter Ivanka converted to Orthodox Judaism before marrying Jared Kushner, and he’s spoken fondly about having Jewish grandchildren.
For years, whenever Jews and Muslims engaged in dialogue and activism together, it usually concerned — or foundered — on one issue: the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Two days after the election, Zachary Rodham — a senior at USC and the nephew of the just-defeated Democratic presidential nominee, Hillary Clinton — was in the midst of drafting an email to his aunt. But he was having trouble finding the right words.
On Sunday, President-elect Donald Trump appointed Stephen Bannon to be his chief strategist.
The Anti-Defamation League decried Donald Trump’s appointment of Stephen Bannon as a top White House adviser, saying Bannon’s association with “unabashed anti-Semites and racists” is disqualifying.
Trump, Clinton or neither? The stakes and passions ran high for 200 young American Israelis who gathered Tuesday in Jerusalem at an election viewing party organized by Masa Israel.