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Northwell Appoints Mark Schiffer, MD, Executive Director of Lenox Hill Hospital

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An accomplished physician with a special interest in preventative cardiology, Dr. Schiffer most recently served as senior vice president and regional physician executive for Northwell’s Western Region, which includes Manhattan, Staten Island and Westchester County.

By: Margarita Oksenkrug

An accomplished cardiologist, Dr. Schiffer will oversee patient care and day-to-day hospital operations for Northwell’s flagship Manhattan hospital

Mark Schiffer, MD, has been named executive director at Lenox Hill Hospital. In his new role, Dr. Schiffer will be responsible for the standard of patient care and the efficiency of day-to-day hospital operations, as well as for providing strategic direction and quality control in alignment with Northwell Health’s mission, values and goals. He has been an attending cardiologist at Lenox Hill for nearly four decades and has held leadership roles both within the hospital and on the health system level.

An accomplished physician with a special interest in preventative cardiology, Dr. Schiffer most recently served as senior vice president and regional physician executive for Northwell’s Western Region, which includes Manhattan, Staten Island and Westchester County.

During his tenure, he was focused on shaping the region’s clinical strategy, optimizing ambulatory operations and enhancing patient experience. He concurrently served as the co-executive of strategic alliances for the health system, where he was responsible for exploring new strategic alliances, affiliations and partnerships with other health care providers in an effort to expand and strengthen the Northwell brand.

Dr. Schiffer began his career at Lenox Hill in the late 1970s as an internal medicine resident. He served as chief resident during his final year and stayed at the hospital to pursue a fellowship in cardiology. In 1983, he was named director of the Cardiac Care Unit. He was later appointed vice chair of cardiovascular medicine and vice president for physician and community relations. He also previously served as president of Lenox Hill’s Medical Board. Dr. Schiffer is currently assistant professor of cardiology at the Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell.

Dr. Schiffer is affiliated with several distinguished professional societies, including the American Heart Association, the American College of Cardiology, the Medical Society of the State of New York, and the New York County Medical Society. He has been listed annually since 1997 in the Castle Connolly guide to the top doctors in the NY metro area. His name has also regularly appeared on New York Magazine’s annual “Best Doctors” list.

After earning his bachelor’s degree from Northwestern University, Dr. Schiffer pursued a degree in medicine from the Northwestern University Medical School. He also holds a certificate in health care delivery management from the Cornell University Graduate School of Management and is a graduate of Harvard Business School’s general management program. He is board-certified in both internal medicine and cardiovascular disease and maintains an active practice in clinical and consultative cardiology in Manhattan.

Lenox Hill Hospital holds a national reputation for outstanding patient care and innovative medical and surgical treatments. It is consistently ranked among the nation’s best hospitals by the U.S. News & World Report. For 2020-21, it was listed as one the top 10 hospitals in the state of New York and ranked among the nation’s best for ear, nose and throat; diabetes and endocrinology; and neurology and neurosurgery. In addition, the hospital received “high performing” designations from U.S. News for its performance in gastroenterology and GI surgery; geriatrics; nephrology; orthopedics; pulmonology; and urology.

Lenox Hill recently received the rare and coveted Magnet status for its commitment to nursing excellence and dedication to the highest quality of patient care. The prestigious international designation from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) has been achieved by only eight percent of hospitals worldwide.

The hospital has also been granted premier accreditation by the Commission on Cancer (CoC) for meeting national quality cancer care standards in 34 key areas and for maintaining excellence in the delivery of comprehensive, patient-centered oncology care. Lenox Hill’s cancer program offers a broad array of oncology services in more than a dozen clinical specialties and a vast multidisciplinary network of specialized clinicians throughout Manhattan.

To honor its commitment to delivering premier clinical care, Lenox Hill has made major investments in recruiting nationally recognized physicians, including numerous prominent oncology experts. The hospital is also dedicated to expanding and enhancing its clinical programs. It has recently established a brand-new midwifery program as a supplemental obstetrical service for maternity patients. The program, a first-of-its-kind for Lenox Hill, offers the full scope of comprehensive, personalized well-woman care options to ensure safety and comfort, as well as to minimize complications during pregnancy and delivery.

Northwell Health is planning a major revitalization of Lenox Hill to be prepared to efficiently deliver the next generation of care and effectively adapt to the changes in modern medicine. The goal is to create a renovated, modernized facility that will feature all private patient rooms, an expanded emergency department, new surgical suites and other clinical spaces, and a dedicated mother-baby hospital with its own separate entrance. As Northwell Health’s flagship hospital in Manhattan, Lenox Hill has delivered world-class clinical care for more than 160 years and currently treats more than 163,000 patients annually. Northwell Health has invested more than $200 million in capital improvements since Lenox Hill Hospital joined the 23-hospital health system in 2010.

The hospital’s neurosurgery team was recently the subject of the highly-acclaimed Netflix docudrama “Lenox Hill.”

 

 

 

Israel Securities Authority Institutes New Rules on US Based Real Estate Companies Borrowing Money in Bond Market

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Edited by: TJVNews.com

It appears that some new rules are in effect that pertain to real estate companies in the United States that have in the past borrowed billions of dollars in the Israeli bond market.

According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, the new regulations that would tighten things up were proposed by the Israel Securities Authority. The WSJ report indicated that “the rules would change how bonds issued by many foreign companies are rated in a way that would discourage Israeli mutual funds, a dominant market player, from buying them, according to market participants.”

Apparently, what sparked the proposed revisions in the ISA policy were defaults on loans by high-profile bond issuers. The WSJ reported that one example would be All Year Holdings Ltd, a Brooklyn property owner that is one of the largest US issuers of Israeli bonds. They were delisted from the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange because they suffered big losses.    Earlier this month All Year was the subject of an investigation by the authorities.

Analysts have indicated that over the last 10 years or thereabouts, about 30 real estate companies based in the United States have raised more than $5.5 billion in the Israeli bond market. The WSJ reported that privately-owned real estate companies based in the United States have used the Israeli market the most despite the fact that it has been open since 2008 to all foreign issuers.  What appeals to the US-based real estate firms is that they have the ability to borrow from the Israeli market at lower interest rates than in the United States

The WSJ reported that “most private real-estate firms aren’t able to borrow in the U.S. bond market on the corporate level, although they are able to sell bonds backed by specific properties.”

Among those US based bond issuers are such prestigious companies as Silverstein Properties Inc., the developer of the World Trade Center; Related Cos., the developer of Hudson Yards in New York City; and Extell Development Co., a developer of ultraluxury condominium skyscrapers, according to the WSJ report.

The WSJ reported that Extell is currently marketing a new issue of about 150 million shekels, according to market participants. Also, Kushner Cos., the company controlled by the family of former Trump administration aide Jared Kushner, has been exploring issuing bonds in Israel. If the regulations become final, both companies would likely have to pay a higher interest rate if they proceed with the deals, they say.

Biden: Gun Control Will Be a ‘Matter of Timing’

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. Photo Credit: AP

 

President Joe Biden, responding to a question on Thursday on when to push gun control measures, promised a series of actions to regulate the sale of firearms but said his next agenda item pertains to U.S. infrastructure.

“All of the above, it’s a matter of timing,” he said in response to a question during his first press conference as president. He then spoke about infrastructure initiatives. Whether it will be through executive actions or Congress, Biden said, “All of the above.”

Biden did not make any other comments about possible action on firearms during the news conference.

The president then pivoted to infrastructure and promised details at an event in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

There has been an increase in pressure on Biden to either take executive action or push congressional Democrats to pass legislation that would restrict firearms ownership in the wake of two mass shootings in Atlanta and Colorado in recent days. Republicans and pro-Second Amendment groups have said such initiatives are unconstitutional, as the Constitution’s Second Amendment ensures the right to bear arms.

“I don’t need to wait another minute, let alone an hour, to take common-sense steps that will save the lives in the future, and to urge my colleagues in the House and Senate to act,” Biden said on Tuesday, coming a day after a gunman shot and killed 10 people in Boulder, Colorado.

Biden, when he was a senator, pointed to the assault weapons ban of 1994 and said he helped ensure that it got passed.

The House, meanwhile, passed two bills earlier this month related to background checks, receiving little Republican support.

Republicans in the Senate, including Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), said they do not favor either bill.

“One thing we do know for sure is that these shooters are invariably mentally incapacitated,” McConnell said. “This is a vexing problem that is extremely hard to identify in advance.”

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) accused Democrats of playing “ridiculous theater” with recent tragedies.

“What happens in this committee after every mass shooting is Democrats propose taking guns away from law-abiding citizens because that is their political objective, but what they propose not only does it not reduce crime, it makes it worse,” the senator said in a hearing Tuesday.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Wednesday that “no one is talking about overturning or changing the Second Amendment” but wants “common-sense measures.” She did not elaborate on the nature of the “common sense” measures.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) in March introduced the “Assault Weapons Ban of 2021,” which would essentially restrict purchases for about 200 common sporting rifles.

Freedom Lessons from Passover

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By Kenneth Abramowitz

Jews around the world celebrate Passover next week. In the diaspora, during the first two evenings, we read the Haggadah with family and friends. The Haggadah tells the
story of the Israelites’ exodus 3,300 years ago from Egyptian slavery to freedom.

The story began two centuries earlier, when the Egyptian King, the Pharaoh, became concerned that the growing Jewish population could become a fifth column that might ally themselves with Egypt’s enemies. He forced the Jews into slavery, which they had to endure for 200 years, until Moses, their new leader, assisted by his brother Aaron, led them to freedom.

Moses pleaded with the Pharaoh to free the Jews from slavery, but he refused. Aiding Moses, G-d extended his “outstretched arm” and sent ten supernatural plagues upon the Egyptians to convince the Pharaoh to “Let My People Go”. Alas, the Pharoah remained obstinate. It was only the tenth plague, the death of all Egyptian first-born sons, that was the last straw. Pharaoh relented and allowed the Jewish people to leave Egypt. They went into the desert to worship G-d, and at Mount Sinai, they received the Ten Commandments, the foundation of the Torah, the Old Testament. The laws and values of Torah led to the success of Western Civilization over the past 3,300 years.

What lessons can we learn today from this historical account? Who are the Pharaohs, the tyrants, who threaten our freedoms today? What can “We the People” do to defend and protect our freedom from tyrannical regimes?

The story of Passover demonstrates six ways to fight both historical and current autocracies:

1) The leader of the uprising must be courageous and shrewd.

2) The people must be supportive and reassured of the morality of their cause.

3) The messaging behind the revolt must be clear, simple, and understandable to all, friend and foe alike. Moses demanded: “Let My People Go”. Our founding fathers did the same when they demanded that our government be dedicated to “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness.”

4) Revolts fail when the tyrant controls the means of communication, but they succeed when the tyrant loses control over his inherently false narrative.

5) Modern uprisings are dependent on peaceful protests and democratic voting processes.

6) Modern revolts can succeed when the oppressed people unite behind a logical and clear narrative, voiced by a leader who is accepted by the overwhelming majority.

The story of Passover also provides some lessons of what not to do:

1) Armed violent revolts by the oppressed make no sense when the despots control the country’s police and arms.

2) Poorly organized or disorganized oppressed people can be easily divided.

3) Revolts driven by confused messaging are highly unlikely to take off or take hold.

Who were the Pharaohs of the 20th century?

1) Russia after the illegal Lenin Bolshevik takeover of 1917.

2) China after 1949, after the Mao-led civil war defeat of the Nationalists.

3) North Korea after the illegal communist takeover in 1945 by the Soviet Union. In 1948, the
Soviets helped establish Communist North Korea and install Kim Il-sung as its leader.

4) Cuba after Castro’s communist takeover in 1959.

5) Iran after the Khomeini Islamic revolution in 1979.

6) Venezuela after Hugo Chavez’s election in 1999.

Who are the aspiring Pharaohs of today?

1) The European Union since the illegal usurpation of sovereign democratic country rights of 27 states in 1993.

2) The US since the Democrat/socialist/communist party with its puppet leader Joe Biden, stole the 2020 election.

How can “We the People” ever regain control our liberties and freedoms?

We should take advantage of the following universal attributes of authoritarian leaders and governments:

1) They are corrupt.

2) Their decisions are bad for 90% of the populace.

3) They constantly deceive the population.

How long would it take for people who once lived under democratic governing systems to free themselves from new autocratic regimes? It could take three generations to defeat such despotic governments, as happened to Communist Russia when the corrupt centralized government system collapsed. Unfortunately, the corrupt media and new communication methods pose a huge challenge to overcome.

Therefore, defeating Biden’s neo-socialist, despotic regime calls for immediate action by ALL freedom-loving Americans. Although the Democrats control Congress and the media, Republican governors and mayors throughout the country should legally oppose Presidential decrees that violate the federal Constitution and their own state laws. Wealthy Republicans should establish and fund alternative media outlets to report the news objectively and counter the Left’s false narratives and indoctrination campaigns.

Time is of essence. Unless actions are taken immediately, the American people will not be able to restore the rights given to us by G-d and our Constitution. Time is short!

===

In the spirit of Passover, which is also called the Holiday of Freedom, we wish our Jewish readers a Happy Passover. And we wish our Christian readers a Happy Easter.

Don’t Forget to Download the Omer Counter App

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Chabad.org’s Omer Counter App has helped thousands of people to fulfill the biblical obligation of counting the 49 days of the Omer between Passover and Shavuot.

 

Throughout the past year, Jewish communities and individuals found new and innovative ways to increase their Jewish observance and engagement despite the global coronavirus pandemic, often by using technology to assist them in their efforts.

With synagogues around the world closed on Passover a year ago, one of the first uses of technology to aid in the performance of mitzvahs that were made more difficult by the pandemic was the widespread use of Chabad.org’s Omer Counter App. More than 2 million days were counted by users of the app last year, and an updated version for 2021 is now available on Apple’s App Store for iOS devices and Google’s Play Store for Android devices.

Perhaps one of the most difficult mitzvahs to fulfill in an ordinary year is the counting of the Omer, which requires that each sequential day be counted (after nightfall) without missing a day—from the second night of Passover all the way until the eve of Shavuot. (If one misses a day, one should still count, but without making a blessing before the counting.) Those who pray in synagogue have an easier time remembering the brief counting ceremony since it is included in the evening service.

In addition to remembering to count on each of 49 consecutive nights, the counter needs to verbalize that night’s count and the corresponding Kabbalistic formula—all that before daybreak, or at least before sunset the following evening.

Highly customizable, the app—with texts in Hebrew and English—tracks the user’s counting record and can then produce the appropriate text for that person (since a person who misses one day may no longer include the special blessing before counting on the subsequent nights that year). In addition to daily reminders, a live counter tells the user how much time remains for counting that day.

Beyond the mechanics of the daily count, the app also features a specially created “daily meditation” from Rabbi Tzvi Freeman, corresponding to the Kabbalistic mystical confluence of sefirot (“emanations”) associated with each day, as well as a wealth of insights and other information culled from Chabad.org’s repository of Jewish content.

For the novice just foraying into the intricacies of Hebrew reading, the app features a trainer that assists students by highlighting each word as it is chanted, allowing them to familiarize themselves with the Hebrew at their own pace. Supported on mobile devices and tablets, it is ideal for those learning while they are on the move.

Lead developer Dov Dukes noted that the technology for the trainer is built on Chabad.org’s “Torah Trainer,” which now includes all 54 Torah portions, their Haftarahs and the blessings recited before and after the readings.

“Omer Counter” is a part of Chabad.org’s Jewish Apps Suite, which strategically leverages Chabad.org’s content and know-how to other platforms.

Through the vision and generosity of a group of funders, the “Omer” app joins the “Hayom” app, the “Passover Assistant,” the “Jewish.tv” Video app, the “Shabbat Times” app, a JewishKids.org app for children and others—all designed to help bring Jewish wisdom and tools to the fingertips of users. Additional apps are in the planning and developmental stages by an international Chabad.org team.

The drive, vision for and underwriting of the apps, which are available free of charge, come from the generous partnership of Dovid and Malkie Smetana, Alan and Lori Zekelman, the Meromim Fund, and Moris and Lillian Tabacinic—all dedicated to spreading the wisdom and practice of Judaism worldwide.

“The possibilities in app development for a Jewish audience are virtually endless,” said Chabad.org director, Rabbi Meir Simcha Kogan. “We are determined to implement the drive and vision of our generous partners and our staff to use the best practices and highest standards in leveraging these technologies for strengthening Jewish awareness and observance.”

The “Omer Counter” app is available free of charge on Apple’s App Store for iOS devicesand Google’s Play Store for Android devices.

White House, Secret Service Deny Involvement in Hunter Biden Gun Incident

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By Theodore Bunker(NEWSMAX)

The White House and the Secret Service have issued statements dismissing reports that the agency intervened in a 2018 incident involving President Joe Biden’s son, Hunter Biden, and Hallie Biden, the widow of Beau Biden.

Politico reported on Thursday that in October, 2018, Hunter and Hallie Biden, who were dating at the time, “were involved in a bizarre incident in which Hallie took Hunter’s gun and threw it in a trash can behind a grocery store, only to return later to find it gone.”

A police report obtained by Politico shows that law enforcement in Delaware started to investigate, noting their concern due to the trash can’s location across the street from a high school.

Politico reports that “a curious thing happened at the time: Secret Service agents approached the owner of the store where Hunter bought the gun and asked to take the paperwork involving the sale, according to two people, one of whom has firsthand knowledge of the episode and the other was briefed by a Secret Service agent after the fact.”

The Secret Service said in a statement to The Hill that the agency had “no involvement in this incident.”

An unidentified White House official told the Hill that President Biden, who did not have Secret Service protection at the time, was not involved and had no knowledge of the incident.

“President Biden did not have any knowledge of, or involvement in, the Secret Service’s alleged role in this incident, and neither he nor any family member was a protectee at that time,” the official said.

This incident reportedly occurred just weeks after the gun was purchased, according to copies of the Firearms Transaction Record obtained by Politico, which notes that he answered “no” on a question on the transaction record asking about prior drug use despite his publicly-acknowledged history of cocaine use, for which he was discharged from the Navy Reserve five years earlier.

The Blaze first reported the incident last October, but it didn’t gain wider attention until Politico reported on it this week.

The store’s general manager, Paula Janssen, told Politico that the Delaware State Police eventually came to retrieve the store’s security footage and to interview Janssen.

“We complied with the police and gave them whatever security footage we could,” she said.

The FBI, which was investigating Hunter Biden at the time over his taxes, also arrived at the scene, but the agency declined to comment to Politico.

The police questioned Hallie and eventually called Hunter to come to the scene, where they questioned him near the store’s loading area. The report states that Hunter told the officers that he used the gun for target practice. It also said that at one point, after two store employees who were described in the report as “Mexican males” walked past them, Hunter told one of the officers that the store employed suspicious people. And according to the report, when asked if he was referring to the two who had walked by, Hunter replied, “Yea, prolly illegal.”

The report also notes that when an officer asked Hunter if the gun had been used to commit a crime, he “became very agitated with me and asked me if I was intentionally trying to make him mad.”

After an officer asked if Hunter had been doing drugs or drinking heavily, Hunter said, “Listen, it isn’t like that. I think she believes I was gonna kill myself.”

The report also states that when asked if he called his father about the incident prior to his arrival at the scene, Hunter said, “I have never called my dad for anything.”

The gun was later returned by a man who frequently looks for recyclable items near the grocery store, according to Politico.

Israel’s final election result is in but the result remains the same – deadlock

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AP

By David Isaac, World Israel News

The counting is complete and the final tally has been released in Israel’s election. The result remains the same – political deadlock with no clear winner as neither the incumbent nor the opposition have the majority necessary to form a government.

The final count, which includes 428,000 “double envelopes” – those from active duty soldiers, citizens affected by the coronavirus, and other special cases – only affected the estimated count slightly.

Likud, the largest party, remained at 30 Knesset seats after final results were announced. Over 1 million Israelis voted Likud.

Currently, the right-wing bloc has 59 total Knesset seats to the opposition’s 57. The minimum to form a government is 61.

Voter turnout was 67.4%, the lowest since 2009 (64.7%).

Although there are many parties, there are in effect only two sides – Likud led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the opposition, led by Yair Lapid of Yesh Atid. Both will now scramble to obtain a majority.

Within a week of the results, the two parties will attempt to win President Reuven Rivlin‘s approval to form a government. Rivlin will pick the side he feels most likely to succeed.

Netanyahu, the longest-serving prime minister in Israel’s history, must be thought of as the favorite, not only for his proven political skills, but because those parties that make up his bloc are politically more attuned than those of his opposition.

The opposition bloc is a hodgepodge of competing interests, including anti-Zionist Arab parties and right-wing anti-Netanyahu parties circling around a large center-Left party.

In the final count, that party, Yesh Atid, lost a mandate to 17. That mandate was picked up by Avigdor Liberman’s Israel Beiteinu party, now at 8 Knesset seats.

However, the opposition may yet coalesce as it appears determined to oust Netanyahu. It may find a way to bridge the ideological gaps in the short-term in order to remove the man it considers its greatest nemesis.

 

After the last election, the opposition attempted to pass an anti-Netanyahu bill, which would have prevented a politician facing indictment (Netanyahu faces three) from serving as prime minister. The bill failed but Liberman is already talking of trying again.

“I am committed to doing everything I can to prevent further elections,” Lieberman tweeted on Thursday. “The first stage goes through the bill that will prevent a Knesset member with an indictment from being a candidate for the formation of a government.”

Zogby Poll: Majority Agree Progressive Ideas on Race, Gender, Cancel Culture Undermining Society

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(NEWSMAX) Most business leaders think certain progressive ideas about society and the ”cancel culture” are a threat to the country and are unnecessary, a new survey showed Thursday.

In The Zogby Poll of 500 decision makers, the leaders were asked about the progressive left’s ideas on race, gender and a ”cancel culture.”

The poll found 61% of the business leaders agreed — 33% strongly and 28% somewhat — that progressive ideas on race, gender, post-colonialism and “cancel culture” were undermining society and were not necessary. The survey found 31% disagreed.

Breaking down the survey by region, in the East, at least 67% somewhat agreed and 24% somewhat disagreed about the negative effects.

In the West, 55% at least somewhat agreed and 36% at least somewhat disagreed about those negative effects.

A majority of every subgroup agreed that certain social science theories on race and gender, along with “cancel culture,” were undermining U.S. society, but smaller companies were more likely to disagree about the negative effects than larger companies, the poll found.

The survey takers also polled the same question among French business decision-makers — and found a similar response overall, Zogby Analytics reported. Three in five French decision-makers at least somewhat agreed the progressive ideas in the United States were undermining French society, while 34% at least somewhat disagreed.

Both nations’ business leaders see the “cancel culture” movement as a threat, Zogby Analytics reported.

The survey’s margin of error in the United States was plus or minus 4.4 percentage points; in France, it was plus or minutes 7.9 percentage points.

US Gives $15 Million to Palestinians to Deal With COVID-19

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. (AP Photo/Daniel Cole)

(AP) The United States said Thursday it is giving $15 million to vulnerable Palestinian communities in the West Bank and Gaza Strip to help fight the COVID-19 pandemic, a sharp reversal from the Trump administration which cut off almost all aid to the Palestinians.

U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield made the announcement at the U.N. Security Council’s monthly Mideast meeting, saying the money from the U.S. Agency for International Development will support Catholic Relief Services’ “COVID-19 response efforts in health care facilities and for vulnerable families in the West Bank and Gaza.”

In addition, she said, the funds will support emergency food aid to communities in need as a result of the pandemic.

“This urgent, necessary aid is one piece of our renewed commitment to the Palestinian people,” Thomas-Greenfield said. “The aid will help Palestinians in dire need, which will bring more stability and security to both Israelis and Palestinians alike.”

Under former U.S. President Donald Trump, the U.S. provided unprecedented support to Israel, recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, moving the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv, breaking relations and slashing financial assistance for the Palestinians. The Trump administration also reversed course on the illegitimacy of Israeli settlements on land claimed by the Palestinians. It did restore about $1 million during the pandemic last year.

Soon after U.S. President Joe Biden was inaugurated on Jan. 20, his administration announced that it was restoring relations with the Palestinians and renewing aid to Palestinian refugees, a reversal of Trump’s cutoff and a key element of its new support for a two-state solution.

Thomas-Greenfield said the $15 million in aid is “consistent with our interests and our values, and it aligns with our efforts to stamp our the pandemic and food insecurity worldwide.”

She made the announcement as Israel awaits the final results from Tuesday’s fourth parliamentary elections in two years. It was widely seen as a referendum on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s fitness to rule while under indictment. His prospects for victory moved out of reach Thursday as the complete vote count showed Netanyahu and his right-wing allies falling short of a parliamentary majority. His opponents also did not assemble a majority of the 120-seat Knesset.

The U.S. announcement Thursday also follows a virtual meeting Tuesday of the so-called Quartet of Mideast mediators – the U.S., U.N., Russia and the European Union – to discuss relaunching their long-stalled effort to get Israel and the Palestinians to negotiate a two-state solution to their decades-old conflict.

A brief statement from the four Mideast mediators, known as the Quartet, said envoys discussed returning “to meaningful negotiations that will lead to a two-state solution, including tangible steps to advance freedom, security and prosperity for Palestinians and Israelis, which is important in its own right.”

There have been no substantive peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians since 2014, and the two sides are fiercely divided over the core issues of the conflict.

Thomas-Greenfield made no mention of a Quartet meeting but reiterated Biden’s support for a two-state solution and said “the United States looks forward to continuing its work with Israel, the Palestinians and the international community to achieve a long-sought peace in the Middle East.”

© Copyright 2021 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Bill Gates: World Should Be ‘Back to Normal’ by End of 2022

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AP

JOSHUA CAPLAN

Microsoft founder and philanthropist Bill Gates predicted this week the world should be “back to normal” by the end of 2022 due to the coronavirus vaccines.

“By the end of 2022 we should be basically completely back to normal,” Gates told Polish newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza and television broadcaster TVN24, according to Reuters. “This is an incredible tragedy.”

Gates’ philanthropic Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has donated $1.75 billion to support vaccines and possible treatments to combat the pandemic worldwide.

Gates made a similar prediction regarding when life may get back to normal in December.

“Certainly, by the summer will be way closer to normal than we are now, but even through early 2022, unless we help other countries get rid of this disease and we get high vaccinations rates in our country, the risk of reintroduction will be there and, of course, the global economy will be slowed down, which hurts America economically in a pretty dramatic way,” the billionaire said in an interview with CNN. “So we will have, starting in the summer, about nine months where a few things like big public gatherings will still be restricted. But we can see now that somewhere between 12 to 18 months, we have a chance, if we manage it well, to get back to normal.”

Gates made headlines in February when he said that he believes “rich countries” such as United States, should switch to consuming 100 percent synthetic beef to combat climate change.

“I don’t think the poorest 80 countries will be eating synthetic meat. I do think all rich countries should move to 100% synthetic beef. You can get used to the taste difference, and the claim is they’re going to make it taste even better over time,” the former Microsoft CEO told MIT Technology Review. “Eventually, that green premium is modest enough that you can sort of change the [behavior of] people or use regulation to totally shift the demand.”

Breitbart

Lifestyle Changes Help Patient Fight Diabetes – A Testimonial

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Leonid Poretsky, MD, chief of endocrinology at Lenox Hill Hospital and director of Northwell Health’s Gerald J. Friedman Diabetes Institute, said that a diabetes diagnosis can be a challenge for people. Many often develop habits around foods that can get in the way of good glucose management.

Edited by: TJVNews.com

We helped Kimberleigh make positive lifestyle changes—and now her Type 2 diabetes is under control.

When Kimberleigh Smith learned she had Type 2 diabetes at a primary care visit, she was shocked. While she had put on some weight since her last checkup, she had simply chalked it up to age. Her diagnosis was a wake-up call that it was time to make some lifestyle changes.

“I quickly realized a diabetes diagnosis was not the best trajectory for my overall health moving into my 50s,” the Brooklyn resident said. “My doctor gave me a referral to the Diabetes Institute—and it really made a huge difference for me.”

Leonid Poretsky, MD, chief of endocrinology at Lenox Hill Hospital and director of Northwell Health’s Gerald J. Friedman Diabetes Institute, said that a diabetes diagnosis can be a challenge for people. Many often develop habits around foods that can get in the way of good glucose management.

Making some key lifestyle changes is the best way to help manage glucose levels—and the Diabetes Institute employs a variety of different programs to help people develop healthier habits.

“We provide a barrier-free approach to help patients develop the skills they need,” Dr. Poretsky explained. “We have endocrinologists, a social worker, an exercise physiologist, nutritionists and diabetes educators who work with patients one-on-one.”

Besides traditional medical care, the center also boasts a kitchen featuring cooking demonstrations, and offers patients gym equipment and exercise classes.

Kimberleigh credits her work with both Dr. Poretsky and the team at the Diabetes Institute in helping her get her blood sugar back on track.

“They were really great about working with me with regards to my treatment regimen,” she said. “There was so much to take advantage of at the Institute and they made it easy to get the help I needed.”

Today, Kimberleigh pays more attention to what she’s eating—and how much she’s eating, too. Her glucose levels reflect those changes. She has lost significant weight and has even gotten back into running, an activity she had given up on years ago.

“Learning how to manage my diabetes has been a good thing for me. I just feel all-around better,” she said.

 

NYT’s Op-Ed Writer Bret Stephens to Become Editor of New Jewish Journal

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Edited by: TJVNews.com
It appears that Bret Stephens, the controversial but utterly dynamic op-ed writer for the New York Times, will now be editing a new publication focusing on Jewish issues.
For those aficionados of Stephens’ writing in the “Paper of Record” fear not, as the iconic opinion columnist will still keep his position there.   
According to a JTA report, Stephens is moon lighting of sorts, taking this on as a side job. JTA reported that the publication is titled “Sapir” and is a “new limited-run journal of essays” that centers around Jewish issues and themes. 
“Sapir” was the initiative of the Maimonides Fund, according to the JTA report. The report says that it is “an increasingly influential force in Jewish philanthropy that supports Jewish identity-building through media, education and Israel engagement. Over the past year, the fund has also become known for its leadership on COVID relief efforts.”
As a quarterly publication, its first issue is slated to be released in mid-April and with focus on the Jewish perspective on social justice. This is a topic that Stephens is quite familiar with as he has addressed it on repeated occasions in his regular New York Times column. He has in the past heaped some sharp critiques on those on the far left of the Jewish spectrum of ideological belief for their efforts in championing social justice causes.  
In an e-mail to the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Stephens said, “Our first issue is on the subject of Jews and social justice. This is a complex, controversial, multidimensional topic. We cover it from a variety of angles — religious, historical, political, ethical — and a range of political persuasions.”
Because racism, visceral anti-Semitism and anti-ethnic hatred are dominating the headlines as of late and have been subjects that American society is grappling with on a consistent basis, the arrival of this journal may come at a highly propitious time. As a staunch detractor of the “cancel culture” and “woke” movements that have become a ubiquitous phenomenon in the political polarization that the United States has been witnessing, there is no doubt that Stephens will have much valuable insight and information to add to the ongoing conversation on the erosion of democratic principles and norms. 
The JTA report also indicated that the target audience that this journal will appeal to will be “leaders and professionals in the organized Jewish community” and will possibly provide solutions to these onerous issues.
The president of the Maimonides Fund, Mark Charendoff, told JTA that he wanted to jump start this previously moribund conversation on the various approaches to social justice, as the lion’s share of the news consuming public obtains their daily share of current happenings from media outlets that pretty much mirror their preexisting views.
 “The country has become more polarized. And social media is a bad place to unearth new perspectives,” Charendoff told the JTA. “Could we create a neutral platform that could afford to present different points of view that are controversial? My vision was this journal.”
Charendoff also told JTA that he selected Stephens for the job because he trusts his objectivity and his ability to pen a thoroughly researched and high–quality product.  Because Stephens lacks a political agenda, he can understand various views and is not in the business of pushing any particular one of them for his own motives.
 “I view Bret as center-right,” Charendoff told JTA. “He has been such a public anti-Trumper so I am not sure the right embraces him. He’ll ensure good quality writing and a diversity of opinion.”

13 Pro Tips for Your Second Passover In Isolation

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It’s hard to believe that a full year has passed since those frenzied and panic-stricken days when we prepared for Passover under heavy lockdown, with little access to groceries and other resources, burdened by uncertainty and fear.

It’s been a long, difficult year. We’ve mourned loved ones, shared our victories, and learned to make sense of what has become our new normal.

As spring is blooming and many have been vaccinated, it feels as if there is finally light at the end of the tunnel. Yet for a variety of reasons, many of us are still isolated, either alone or with one or two close family members, and preparing to celebrate Pesach in isolation for a second time.

With you in mind, we’ve prepared the following list of tips for making this Passover as positive, meaningful and memorable as possible!

Click for a handy fridge poster for this year

1. Clean for Passover

If you’ve had relatively few people trekking through your house, then your clean-up may be easier than usual, since we need only clean places where we could have conceivably brought chametz (leaven) in the first place.

Have magazines been stacking up on the coffee table and have you neglected to empty the garbage cans as often you did pre-pandemic? This is the perfect opportunity to give your house a much-needed freshening up.

Read: How to Clean for Passover in 10 Days or Less

2. Sell Chametz Online

A traditional part of the Passover prep is coming to the rabbi and appointing him as your agent to sell (to a non-Jew) any chametz items that you will not eat or otherwise dispose of before the onset of the holiday.

For those of us still at home, the good news is that (like every year) Chabad.org provides this service online. It’s fast, easy, and free, Plus you can do it now in advance.

Sell Your Chametz Now

3. Cook Up a Kosher-for-Passover Storm

Thank G‑d, unlike last Passover, this year we have generally access to the groceries and supplies we need to make our Seders beautiful and expansive, even if we will still be physically distant from some of those we wish could share our tables.

Once you’ve koshered your kitchen for Passover, cook up your favorite Passover recipes, both to have at your Seder and to share with friends and family who will not be with you. Just knowing that they’ll be enjoying the same memory-rich treats as you is an act of connection.

Browse Passover Recipes New and Old Here

4. Make Calls Before Passover

We have learned early on in the pandemic how powerful a phone call or video chat can be. Hearing and seeing our loved ones, we give and gain strength, power, and positive feelings.

While we do not make phone calls on the holiday itself, it is a great idea to make a list of people to call before the holiday, taking the time to inquire about their wellbeing and share wishes for a kosher and happy Passover.

Read: 5 Tips to Surviving Extended Lockdown With Your Sanity Intact

5. Make It Beautiful

True you may not be putting out as many settings as usual, but that should be no excuse for not bringing out the heirloom Passover china and finest table wear.

We can also make our homes look special in honor of Passover. There are wonderful adult coloring sheets out there, which enable anyone with a set of colored pencils to make true works of beauty before the onset of the holiday.

Let your craftiness shine as you create centerpieces and wall hangings to add a festive ambiance to your Seders.

Note to families with kids: Send handmade decorations to Bubby and Zaidy. They will be glad to look at them and think of you all Passover long.

Print: Fun Passover Coloring Pages

6. Treat Yourself to a New Haggadah

No matter how many times we say the timeless words of the Haggadah, we can always peel back the layers to find fresh meaning, insights, and inspiration.

This year, Chabad.org is delighted to share our all-new Passover Haggadah, as a free download for you to print before the holiday.

Print: The All-New Chabad.org Haggadah

7. Be Aware That This Year Is Unique

This year (2021) is the first time in more than a decade that Passover begins on Saturday night. This means that many of the activities typically done on the eve of Passover are advanced to Friday and even Thursday.

Get yourself up to speed on what you will need to do—and when—in this unusual setup, including details on how to hold your Shabbat meal in a house that is already cleaned for Passover.

Read: When Erev Pesach Is Shabbat

8. Pray Like a Pro at Home

At this point we have had a year to absorb the concept that G‑d is everywhere, and that we can connect to Him from anywhere in the world. As we have been doing for so long, remember to hold Passover services at home.

Some elements of the prayer service that are especially easy to forget:

● According to Chassidic and Sephardic custom, Hallel is said following evening services on the Seder night(s).

● Starting from Musaf on the first day of Passover we stop mentioning (and requesting) rain during the Amidah (silent prayer).

● Starting from the second night of Passover, we count the Omer each night, adding up the days until Shavuot.

9. Do Both Seders

It may seem like a repeat, especially without any new faces to freshen things up, but the fact remains that the second Seder is a mitzvah, which we should embrace with the same enthusiasm and joy as the night before!

10. Ask The Four Questions

There’s no question that Seder was built around the dynamics of parents educating their children and transmitting our nation’s Divinely orchestrated history and heritage. At the same time, it remains meaningful and relevant to every single Jew, even those who are celebrating without the presence of the next generation.

For example: Ask the Four Questions aloud. If you are with others, address the questions to them. And if not, address the questions to our Father in Heaven. You can be sure He will be listening.

Brush Up on the Four Questions

11. Be Grateful That We Made It

As we sing Dayenu, the traditional litany of praises in which we express our gratitude for the kindnesses He showered upon us as we made our way out of Egypt, pause and think of the many blessings He has bestowed upon us during this past year.

The vaccines are rolling out, we are healthy, technology allows us to communicate with the outside world and keep abreast of latest news, we have a roof over our heads and food in the kitchen. The list goes on and on… There’s so much to be thankful for. We need only think about it!

Brush Up on the Dayenu Song

12. Double Dip on Yizkor

On the final day of Passover, in synagogues all over the world, we hold Yizkor, the memorial service for our dear departed. A year ago, virtually no one in the entire world said Yizkor in the synagogue. Now, thank G‑d, synagogues have reopened and many will be saying Yizkor together. If you will not be able to attend, it may be a good idea to ask a dear friend or rabbi to say Yizkor for your loved ones, and at the same time, you may recite the prayer from home as well.

Print: Yizkor at Home

13. Print Out Lots to Read

It’s a beautiful time of year in the Northern Hemisphere, and we can look forward to enjoying the lovely spring weather, replete with quiet walks on isolated nature trails and other safe outdoor activities.

Yet it is probably a good idea to make sure you’ve printed up enough Torah content and Passover-themed inspiration to keep you engaged throughout the holiday.

Print Articles Here

Should you wish for a boost of inspiration specifically for those of us celebrating alone, print up some goodies here.

With wishes for a healthy and happy Passover!

Your friends at Chabad.org

AstraZeneca Insists Strong Vaccine Protection after US Rift

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(AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos, File)

(AP) AstraZeneca insisted that its COVID-19 vaccine provides strong protection even after counting additional illnesses in its U.S. study, as the drugmaker responded to concerns raised by American officials in an unusually public rebuke that threatened to further erode confidence in the shot.

In a late-night news release Wednesday, AstraZeneca said it had analyzed more data from that study and concluded the vaccine is 76% effective in preventing symptomatic COVID-19, instead of the 79% it had reported earlier in the week.

Some experts called the new analysis reassuring and said the updated details didn’t look substantially different from what was announced earlier. A peek at the full data won’t come for at least another few weeks, once the Food and Drug Administration begins its own stringent review. For now, it’s not clear if the new figures will be sufficient to repair the credibility in a vaccine that, despite being widely used in Britain, Europe and other countries, has had a troubled rollout.

Earlier this week, an independent panel that oversees the U.S. trial of the vaccine had accused AstraZeneca of cherry-picking data to tout the protection offered by its shot. The panel, in a harsh letter to the company and to U.S. health leaders, said AstraZeneca had left out some COVID-19 cases that occurred in the study.

The drugmaker responded that the results it reported included cases up to mid-February, as agreed in the study rules, and that it was preparing a fuller analysis of cases that had occurred since then — which it released Wednesday.

“AstraZeneca may have just been too hasty in submitting the earlier, incomplete interim analysis rather than waiting to analyze and submit the full dataset,” said Julian Tang, a virologist at the University of Leicester who was not connected to the research. He said the updated details were likely solid enough for U.S. regulators to authorize the vaccine.

Before the new results were released, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert, told reporters he hoped that when all the data was publicly vetted by the FDA, it would dispel any hesitancy caused by the spat. He predicted it would “turn out to be a good vaccine.”

AstraZeneca had been counting on findings from a predominantly U.S. study of 32,000 people to help rebuild confidence in its shot, which is crucial to global efforts to end the coronavirus pandemic since it is cheap, easy to store and a pillar of the COVAX initiative aimed at bringing vaccines to low- and middle-income countries. Despite evidence from trials and in real-world use that it does protect, previous studies have turned up inconsistent data about the degree of effectiveness.

 

Then last week a scare over blood clots had some countries temporarily pausing inoculations. Most have since restarted after the European Medicines Agency said the vaccine doesn’t increase the overall incidence of blood clots, though it did not rule out a connection to some rare clots. On Thursday, Denmark announced it would continue its suspension of the vaccine.

AstraZeneca’s newest effectiveness calculations were based on 190 COVID-19 cases that occurred during the U.S. study, 49 more than it had included earlier in the week. The vaccine appears especially protective against the worst outcomes, with no severe illnesses or hospitalizations among vaccinated study volunteers compared to eight severe cases among those given dummy shots, the company said. It didn’t provide a breakdown of the rest of the cases.

Some European authorities have questioned how protective the vaccine is in older adults. In the U.S. study, it was 85% effective in volunteers 65 and older, the company said. The study didn’t turn up safety concerns.

The updated information “confirms that our COVID-19 vaccine is highly effective in adults, including those aged 65 years and over,” AstraZeneca research chief Mene Pangalos said in a statement. He said the company looks forward to “the rollout of millions of doses across America.”

The study hasn’t ended, so additional COVID-19 cases could still accrue. AstraZeneca cautioned that 14 additional possible cases already are being examined and that could lead to further changes in the data.

The company intends to seek FDA clearance of the vaccine within a few weeks. The agency will publicly debate all the evidence with its outside advisers before making a decision.

Stephen Evans, a vaccines expert at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said it was difficult to understand why the dispute between AstraZeneca and U.S. officials spilled into the public. Such rifts during ongoing studies typically remain confidential.

“Given the details given here, it seems an unnecessary action to have raised concerns in public,” he said. “Results fluctuate as data accumulate … what counts will be the FDA assessment and that will be done based on scrutiny of the full data and not press releases.” He said any vaccine with an efficacy rate higher than 60% is useful.

He said it was unclear why there was “a breakdown in relations” between AstraZeneca and the independent U.S. data experts monitoring the trial and worried that could undermine confidence in the vaccine.

“This vaccine is so important for global health, and the disputes do not promote global health,” he said. “At least in the short term, (this) will undermine confidence both in the U.S. and more importantly in the rest of the world.”

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Associated Press Medical Writer Maria Cheng in London and Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen contributed to this report.

Jewish Community Relations Council of New York Appoints New Chief Executive Officer

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The Board of Directors of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York (JCRC-NY) announced the appointment of Gideon Taylor as Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer as of July 1, 2021 ushering in a new chapter in the leadership of New York’s most prominent Jewish community relations and advocacy organization.

Gideon TaylorMr. Taylor has served as a member of the JCRC-NY Board of Directors for the past five years and will succeed current Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer Michael S. Miller, who will conclude his longstanding tenure on June 30, 2021 after more than 36 years at the helm of the organization.

With a history of leadership, Mr. Taylor is Executive Vice President of EWKA, Inc., a commercial real estate company in New York. In June 2020, Mr. Taylor was elected as lay President of the Board of Directors of the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (Claims Conference), the entity responsible for Holocaust restitution negotiations and social welfare programs for Nazi victims worldwide. He previously served as Executive Vice President of the Claims Conference and as Assistant Executive Vice President of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee.

In September 2020, a Search Committee was formed, and following a six-month search, the committee presented its recommendation to the Executive Committee which in turn conveyed its unanimous choice to the full Board at its meeting today.

“Gideon is a passionate and well-respected leader who has served the diverse New York Jewish community locally as well as the wider Jewish community internationally.  At this critical moment, as our community faces increased levels of antisemitism, internal polarization, and a changing political landscape, we are delighted that Gideon has been selected to lead JCRC-NY into the future,” said JCRC-NY President Cheryl Fishbein.

“For decades, JCRC-NY has fostered meaningful relationships with the political, ethnic, and faith leadership of New York.  As our city continues to evolve and diversify, we are confident that Gideon’s advocacy and leadership will be a positive force for the collective good of the Jewish community and our neighbors throughout New York City, Long Island, and Westchester,” said Jonathan Greenspun, Chair of the Search Committee and Managing Director at Mercury Public Affairs.

“As we emerge from the pandemic, we are aware that the coming years will bring other unique challenges for JCRC-NY and the New York Jewish community – some discernible and some that we cannot forecast,” said Taylor.  “I intend to continue the essential work of building close relationships within the Jewish community and strengthening our commitment to build impactful coalitions with the many diverse communities that make up our City.”

Michael S. Miller noted, “JCRC-NY is very fortunate to have Gideon Taylor as my successor and its next CEO.  His work on the international scale has benefitted innumerable Jewish communities, including many Holocaust survivors in New York.  I have worked with Gideon both in his role as a Jewish professional and as a lay leader and have witnessed his dedication to strengthening our Jewish community and his commitment to building bridges of understanding with others.”

“UJA-Federation is a proud supporter and partner of JCRC-NY in the community relations and advocacy arena,” said Eric S. Goldstein, Chief Executive Officer of UJA-Federation of New York. “We welcome Gideon as the new CEO of JCRC-NY. He is an accomplished leader, and we look forward to working with him, and the entire JCRC-NY team, in building stronger bridges across our community.”

William C. Daroff, Chief Executive Officer of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations said: “I have often sought Gideon’s guidance on effectively engaging Members of Congress, the Executive Branch, and international governments on issues pertaining to Holocaust survivors and property restitution. Gideon is a trusted advisor and confidante who knows the New York civic and political scene very well.”

Originally from Dublin, Ireland, Mr. Taylor is a law graduate of Trinity College in Dublin and received his master’s degree in law from Oxford University.  He is admitted as an attorney in the State of New York, Ireland and the United Kingdom.

ABOUT JCRC-NY

JCRC-NY, a proud UJA-Federation of NY agency, serves as the primary community relations agency for the Jewish community in the metropolitan New York area.  As an active force in New York civic and communal life, JCRC-NY operates as a central coordinating and resource body to: (1) Be a common table to cultivate understanding and joint action amongst diverse groups within the Jewish community; (2) Cultivate deeper relationships with the broader New York community to address critical issues and engender a shared society; (3) Ensure the security of the Jewish community in the face of rising antisemitism; and (4) Foster understanding and appreciation for the Jewish community’s relationship with Israel, and to increase knowledge, exposure, and support for Israel among diverse groups of New Yorkers.

Analysis: Israel still can’t make up its mind about Netanyahu

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AP

By Jonathan S. Tobin, Editor-in-Chief, JNS

When the first exit polls were published, it seemed as if the long stalemate had been ended. Within a couple of hours, however, the polls had been revised, and by the end of a long night and morning of counting, it turned out that the deadlock between those who wish to keep Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister and those who want to get rid of him hadn’t been broken.

With 88.5 percent of the vote counted (and with approximately half a million absentee votes that could alter the electoral math still left to be tabulated), the parties supporting Netanyahu, plus one likely coalition partner, had fallen two seats short of the 61 Knesset seats needed to form a new government.

By the same token, the disparate group of parties that agree on very little, but which are all pledged to oust the prime minister, were similarly short of a clear path to an alternative government.

This fourth consecutive election stalemate in two years is a discouraging outcome for the Jewish state. It’s not just an annoying waste of time. More than that, it has been estimated that the cost of holding these four votes amounted to $4.24 billion—a staggering sum for a small country that, like the rest of the world, is dealing with the economic catastrophe caused by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Aside from the not-inconsiderable expenses involved in staging the contest, election days are legal holidays in Israel. That costs company holiday pay, as well as a loss of productivity and sales, even though some businesses, like restaurants, benefit from people having the day off.

Then there is the plain fact that the lack of a national budget for 2020—let alone 2021—is also a blow to stability and the country’s economic well-being.

There is a national consensus that the standoff has been something of a disgrace since, among other things, the frequency of elections means that Israel has now surpassed Italy as the home of the most unstable democracy in the world. And yet, the one person who hasn’t been hurt by it is Netanyahu.

The failure to form a stable government has served him fairly well since it enables him to govern without actually winning an election. Even the lack of a budget has made it easier for him since he hasn’t been hampered by the financial negotiations that would have undermined his agenda.

Indeed, in the course of the last year, Netanyahu hasn’t just managed to stay afloat. Since Israel was last forced to the polls, the prime minister had what historians may ultimately say were his two greatest accomplishments: the signing of the Abraham Accords and the successful effort to get Israelis vaccinated against COVID-19, enabling it to be the first of nations to essentially emerge from the yearlong pandemic crisis.

Any leader with two such impressive achievements to his credit might have expected to be easily re-elected. But the election results speak volumes about both his strengths and his weaknesses. That’s because it could also be said that no prime minister who was facing trial for three corruption charges and who had worn out his welcome with both the public and political colleagues after 12 consecutive years in office could reasonably presume to emerge from an election as the head of the largest party and as the only person with a chance to form a government, as is also the case with Netanyahu.

His able statesmanship and skillful governance—not to mention a national consensus behind his core positions on issues that used to divide Israel over policy towards the Palestinians, territory and settlements—have made him something of an institution. It’s no wonder that polls show that most Israelis (including many who don’t vote for him) think that he’s the most qualified person to hold the top job.

Still, his constant scheming, untrustworthiness in political negotiations and the sense of entitlement that go with having stayed in office so long with no thought of grooming a successor, let alone stepping aside for the next generation, has also fueled rage at
Netanyahu on the part of a broad cross-section of the Israeli public. It may be created by a mix of partisanship and ideology (many in the “anybody but Bibi” camp would be similarly determined to oppose any Likud leader or non-leftist), but it is nonetheless real.

His followers cannot imagine Israel being led by anyone else. And yet the fact that so many Israelis seem focused on nothing but the quest to topple him has further embittered the country’s political discourse.

A way out?

Can Netanyahu find a way out of the corner into which the Israeli public has painted itself?

Talk of defectors from other parties is, as was the case last year, mooted by his supporters, but that seems even less likely this time around. Another possibility of a solution is both a laudable development as well as a potential case of staggering hypocrisy.

When the four disparate Arab factions ran together as a single party last year, they won 15 seats as the Joint Arab List. When Blue and White leader Benny Gantz spoke of his willingness to deal with that coalition of anti-Zionists—many of whom sympathize with terrorists—the Likud and others blasted the idea as something that would compromise the nation’s security.

The Joint List split when Mansour Abbas, leader of the Ra’am Party that advocates the conversion of Israel into an Islamist Palestinian state, pointed out something that was quite true. Israeli Arabs have been badly served by their politicians. Many of them are corrupt and have spent their time working harder to support Palestinian efforts to undermine Israel than on trying to assist their constituents.

Abbas (no relation to the Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas) suggested that it was time for them to stop grandstanding in order to help allies in Ramallah and Gaza, and start doing deals with the Zionist parties in order to serve their people better.

Assuming that the current results stand up after all the votes are counted, that led to a loss of four seats for the Arabs after the Joint List won six seats and Ra’am five.

As he promised during the campaign, however, Abbas says that he is open to supporting either side of the Israeli political divide in order to advance the interests of Israeli Arabs. That opens up the possibility that one of the non-Jewish parties would become part of a government, even if it meant supporting it from outside the coalition.

If Ra’am enables Netanyahu and the Likud to govern in this fashion, the prime minister and his supporters would be open to charges of staggering hypocrisy. Then again, it would also give the lie to the canard that Israel is an “apartheid state.”

It would also illustrate just how far the Abraham Accords and the other normalization deals between Israel, and Arab and Muslim states, have helped erode support for the century-long war on Zionism. Friendly relations with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain are a signal to Arab voters that it’s in their interests to stop acting like auxiliaries of Palestinian terror groups.

This scenario may not happen—not the least because many of Netanyahu’s supporters won’t tolerate sitting in a government whose existence depends on the votes of those who don’t really want it to exist. It also doesn’t alter the fact that half of the country will never rest until he is finally defeated. Nor does it erase the way the prime minister’s sense of indispensability and double-dealing has fatally divided an Israeli right that might otherwise be firmly in control under almost any other leader.

The mere fact that the option of a deal with an Arab party can be realistically discussed is also a tribute to how much Netanyahu has changed Israel and the Middle East.