Look out, suckers: Creepy Joe Biden just appointed 5 more Jews to top posts

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Biden Appoints Five Jews to Top Posts, Boy, Are their Mothers Proud

By David Israel -
November 24, 2020

Link: https://www.jewishpress.com/news/je...posts-boy-are-their-mothers-proud/2020/11/24/

As President-elect Joe Biden’s transition is kicking into high gear after the Trump administration’s General Services Administration on Monday finally agreed to acknowledge his victory, we can report that at least five Jews will serve in top positions in the new administration: Ronald A. Klain as White House Chief of Staff; Antony John Blinken as Secretary of State; Janet L. Yellen Secretary of the Treasury; Alejandro N. Mayorkas as Secretary of Homeland Security; and Avril Danica Haines as Director of National Intelligence.

Ron Klain / Senator Chris Coons via Wikimedia

Ron Klain, 59, was born in Indianapolis, Indiana to a building contractor named Stanley Klain, and his travel agent wife Sarann Warner (née Horwitz), both of whom are Jewish. Ron Klain graduated from North Central High School in 1979 and was on the school’s Brain Game team which finished as season runner-up. He received his Bachelor of Arts degree summa cum laude from Georgetown University in 1983. In 1987, he received his Juris Doctor degree magna cum laude from Harvard Law School. He clerked for Supreme Court Justice Byron White during the 1987 and 1988 terms. In the Clinton White House, Klain was Associate Counsel to the President and led the team that won the confirmation of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. In 1995, he became Chief of Staff to Vice President Al Gore. In 2008, he became Chief of Staff to Vice President Joe Biden, having served as counsel to the Senate Committee on the Judiciary while Biden chaired the committee.

Antony Blinken / US State Department

Tony Blinken, 58, was born in New York City to his Jewish parents, Judith (Frehm) and Donald Blinken. He attended the Dalton School until 1971, when he moved to Paris, to attend École Jeannine Manuel. He lived in Paris with his divorced mother and her new husband, attorney Samuel Pisar, a Holocaust survivor. Blinken attended Harvard University where he earned his bachelor’s degree. He earned his J.D. degree at Columbia Law School in 1988. After graduation, he practiced law in New York City and Paris. He served on the United States National Security Council staff at the White House from 1994 to 2001. From 1994 through 1998, Blinken was Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Strategic Planning and NSC Senior Director for Speechwriting. From 1999 to 2001 he was Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for European and Canadian Affairs. In 2002 Blinken was appointed staff director for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, until 2008. From 2009 to 2013, Blinken served as Deputy Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor to the Vice President. In December 2014, Blinken was confirmed as Deputy Secretary of State by the Senate. In 2002, Blinken married Evan Ryan in a bi-denominational ceremony officiated by a Jewish clergy and priest at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Washington, DC.

Janet Yellen / United States Federal Reserve

Janet Yellen, 74, was born to Polish Jews from Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. Her mother, Anna Ruth (née Blumenthal) was an elementary school teacher, and her father, Julius Yellen, was a family physician, whose clinic was on the ground floor of their home. Janet Yellen graduated from Fort Hamilton High School as a valedictorian. She graduated summa cum laude from Pembroke College in Brown University with a degree in economics in 1967. She received her Ph.D. in economics from Yale University in 1971 and was the only woman in her doctoral class. Yellen served as Chair of President Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers from 1997 to 1999, and served on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors from 1994 to 1997. She chaired the Economic Policy Committee of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development from 1997–1999. From 2004 until 2010, Yellen was the President and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She was a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in 2009. In 2010, President Obama nominated Yellen as vice-chair of the Federal Reserve System. Yellen simultaneously began a 14-year term as member of the Federal Reserve Board that will expire in 2024. On January 6, 2014, the Senate conformed Yellen as Chair of the Federal Reserve by a vote of 56–26, the narrowest margin ever for the position.

Alejandro Mayorkas / United States Citizenship and Immigration Services

Alejandro Mayorkas, 61, was born in Havana, Cuba, in 1959, and his parents arrived with him and his sister to the United States in late 1960 as refugees, following the Cuban Revolution. The family started out in Miami, Florida, but later moved to Los Angeles, California. His father was a Sephardic Jew, and his mother a Romanian Jew whose family escaped the Holocaust and fled to Cuba in the 1940s. Mayorkas earned his Bachelor of Arts degree with distinction from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1981. He received his Juris Doctor from Loyola Law School in Los Angeles in 1985. In 1998, Mayorkas was recommended by Senator Dianne Feinstein and appointed by President Clinton as the United States Attorney for the Central District of California, becoming the youngest United States Attorney in the nation. In 2009, Mayorkas was appointed by President Obama as the Director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services. Mayorkas transformed the agency, including realigning its organizational structure to prioritize the agency’s fraud detection and national security responsibilities and creating an office of public engagement that made the agency more transparent and open in its consideration, development, and promulgation of policies and practices impacting the more than 7 million people who apply for benefits each year. Mayorkas championed United States citizenship, management efficiencies and fiscal responsibility, and safeguarding the integrity of the immigration system. In 2014, Mayorkas was promoted to the position of Deputy Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.

Avril Haines

Avril Haines, 51, was born in Manhattan on August 29, 1969, to a Jewish mother, Adrian (née Rappaport), and Thomas Haines. Her mother was a painter and died when Avril was 15. Her father is a biochemist and professor emeritus at City College, who helped found the CUNY School of Medicine, where he served as the chair of the biochemistry department. After graduating from Hunter College High School, Haines enrolled in 1988 in the University of Chicago where she studied theoretical physics and worked repairing car engines at a mechanic shop in Hyde Park. In 1991 Haines had taken up flying lessons before graduating with a Bachelor of Arts in physics degree in 1992. In 1998, Haines enrolled at the Georgetown University Law Center and received her Juris Doctor in 2001. In 2001, Haines became a legal officer at the Hague Conference on Private International Law. In 2002, she became a law clerk for United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Judge Danny Julian Boggs. From 2003 to 2006, Haines worked in the Office of the Legal Adviser of the Department of State. From 2007 until 2008, Haines worked for the United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations as Deputy Chief Counsel for the Majority Senate Democrats (under then-chairman Joe Biden). She then worked for the State Department as the assistant legal adviser for treaty affairs from 2008 to 2010. In 2010, Haines was appointed to serve in the office of the White House Counsel as Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy Counsel to the President for National Security Affairs at the White House. In 2013, Obama nominated Haines to serve as Legal Adviser of the Department of State but later withdrew her nomination, choosing instead to select her as Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency.
 
Enough for a minyan: A Jewish Who’s Who of Biden’s Cabinet-to-Be

By Jacob KornbluhJanuary 18, 2021

Link: https://forward.com/news/462330/enough-for-a-minyan-a-jewish-whos-who-of-bidens-cabinet-to-be/

As President-elect Joe Biden announced his picks for the Cabinet, the joke went around on Jewish Twitter that the West Wing would have a minyan.

Indeed, at least 10 prominent Jews have been nominated to key positions. There’s Ronald Klain (chief of staff); Anthony Blinken (Secretary of State); Janet Yellen (Treasury); Merrick Garland (Attorney General); Alejandro Mayorkas (Homeland Security);and Avril Haines (Director of National Intelligence). One level down are Wendy Sherman (deputy Secretary of State); Eric Lander (science and technology adviser); Ann Neuberger (deputy National Security Adviser); and David Cohen (deputy CIA director).

Plus there’s Doug Emhoff, the Jewish husband of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris.

Doug Emhoff and Kamala Harris. by the Forward

Advice to the Second Gentleman from a veteran male ‘rebbetzin’

Rob EshmanNovember 14, 2020
It’s a “remarkable statement about the place of Jews in this society,” said Jason Isaacson, the American Jewish Committee’s chief policy and political affairs officer in Washington. Amid the rise in antisemitism and its role underpinning the Capitol siege on Jan. 6, Isaacson added, the fact that so many well-known and engaged Jews will serve in the highest levels of the administration “and no one talks about that and it’s not an issue, that says a lot about how far American society has progressed.”
After Biden’s inauguration on Wednesday, most of these individuals will have to be confirmed by the United States Senate. Here’s a who’s who guide to the West Wing minyan-to-be:

Ronald Klain: White House Chief of Staff

Ron Klain by the Forward

By NICHOLAS KAMM/Getty Image...

Ron Klain on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on March 10, 2020

Born and raised in Indianapolis, Klain, 59, said in an interview with The New York Times in 2007, that when he married his non-Jewish wife, Monica Medina, they agreed that their three children — Daniel, Hannah and Michael — would be raised Jewish, but that the family would also celebrate Christmas.

A Harvard Law School graduate, Klain first served as chief of staff to former Vice President Al Gore and later as chief of staff to Biden during his first term as vice president. In 2014 he was appointed as President Barack Obama’s Ebola response coordinator.

Klain — an active Twitter user — played a key role in drafting Biden’s plan to address COVID-19 during the presidential campaign.

Tevi Troy, a historian and author of “Fight House,” a book about rivalries at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, pointed out that a number of Jews have preceded Klain in the role. Josh Bolten was President George W. Bush’s chief of staff from 2006 to 2009, followed by Rahm Emanuel and Jack Lew, who both served President Barack Obama.

While neither carried the title, Jared Kushner and Stephen Miller were perhaps President Trump’s closest and most influential aides throughout his term.

Antony Blinken: Secretary of State

Antony Blinken by the Forward

By CHANDAN KHANNA/Getty Imag...

Secretary of State-designate Antony Blinken speaks on November 24, 2020.
Born in New York City, Blinken, 58, moved to Paris at age 9 with his mother and stepfather, Samuel Pisar, a Holocaust survivor from Poland. During the Biden campaign and in his speech accepting the nomination in December, Blinken recounted how Pisar, a lawyer, came to the U.S. after escaping a death march out of a concentration camp towards the end of WWII.
Blinken’s father, Donald Blinken, served as U.S. Ambassador to Hungary under former President Bill Clinton. His uncle Alan was ambassador to Belgium during the same time. Blinken’s great-grandfather, Meir Blinken, was a Yiddish writer in the early 1900s.

Also a Harvard graduate, Blinken’s first government job was at the National Security Council under Clinton. He was promoted to senior director for strategic planning, then became a speechwriter for the president. During the Bush years, Blinken was staff director for the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Blinken worked on Biden’s unsuccessful 2008 campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination, and eventually joined the Obama-Biden transition team. During Obama’s first term, Blinken was Vice President Biden’s national security adviser.

In 2014, he was tapped to serve as deputy to then-Secretary of State John Kerry. In recent years, Blinken was part of the WestExec Advisors strategy advising firm and served as a senior foreign policy adviser, as well as a channel for Jewish and pro-Israel organizations, during Biden’s 2020 campaign.

Blinken has also played on a Jewish Community Center indoor-soccer team in Washington, and — along with now-Congressman Tom Malinowski of New Jersey — wrote parody songs and self-parody movies on American foreign policy. The pair revived their band in Obama’s state department.

U2 frontman Bono and Antony Blinken during Senate Appropriations Subcommittee testimony in 2016 by the Forward

What Antony Blinken’s band says about how he’ll lead as Secretary of State

PJ GrisarNovember 23, 2020

Blinken’s plate is pretty full for the first 100 days. He must restore morale among career diplomats who have struggled under Trump, and reestablish fraying ties with traditional allies. He will also lead diplomatic talks about rejoining d the Paris climate accord, reentering the Iran nuclear deal and advancing Middle East peace. In a pre-election interview with Jewish Insider, Blinken applauded the recently signed Abraham Accords between Israel and several Arab countries as a “positive step,” but indicated that the Biden administration will also focus on reviving the Israeli -Palestinian peace process and taking the diplomatic route to tackle the Iranian threat.

Dan Shapiro, Obama’s ambassador to Israel, said that Blinken “draws on his Jewish and American family story” and “marries that with a core conviction about the essential nature of U.S. leadership in the world — to defend our people and our security, to support our allies, to confront our adversaries, to uphold our values, and to tackle the most pressing global challenges.”

As Biden’s closest foreign policy aide for two decades, Shapiro noted, Blinken will operate “with the full and complete confidence of the president.”

Janet Yellen: Secretary of the Treasury

Enough for a minyan: A Jewish Who’s Who of Biden’s Cabinet-to-Be by the Forward

Image by getty images

Born and raised by a Polish-Jewish family in Brooklyn, Yellen, 74, will make history as the first woman to head the department. The daughter of Anna Blumenthal and Julius Yellen, she was also the only woman to graduate with a Ph.D. in economics from Yale University in 1971.

Yellen went on to teach economics at Harvard before she was hired by the Federal Reserve Board of Governors to do research on international monetary reform. In 1994, Clinton appointed Yellen to the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors. Yellen left the Federal Reserve in 1997 to become chair of Clinton’s Council of Economic Advisers, but returned in 2010, Obama elevated her to be chair of the Federal Reserve board in his second term.

Yellen was one of the people depicted in a last-minute campaign ad by Trump in 2016 that was criticized for — peddling anti-Jewish stereotypes. The ad decried the influence of “those who control the levers of power in Washington” and singled out Yellen, billionaire George Soros and Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein. Despite this, Yellen was initially favored for another term on the Fed, but Trump changed course and picked Jerome Powell, a Republican, a move that Yellen called disappointing.

At Treasury, Yellen’s challenges include reviving a pandemic-plagued economy, restoring some of the Trump administration’s regulatory rollbacks and leading the sanctions regime against Russia, China and Iran, among other countries.

Sheila Katz, CEO of the National Council of Jewish Women, said that in addition to being uniquely qualified for the job, Yellen “will be breaking another glass ceiling on behalf of women everywhere,” if confirmed.

Merrick Garland: Attorney General

Merrick Garland by the Forward

Image by Getty Images

Merrick Garland
Garland, 68, grew up in the heavily Jewish Chicago suburb of Skokie with a father and a mother whose immigrant parents fled Russia to escape antisemitism and persecution in the early 1900s.

After graduating from Harvard, Garland worked as a clerk to legendary Second Circuit Judge Henry Friendly, and later to Supreme Court Justice William Brennan. During the Carter administration, Garland was special assistant to Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti.

In 1989, shortly after becoming a partner in a private law firm, Garland became a federal prosecutor. He had senior positions in the Clinton justice department, and since 1997, has served on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

President Obama’s 2016 nomination of Garland to the Supreme Court was thwarted by the Republican-controlled Senate, which refused to hold confirmation hearings because it was an election year.

“As a longtime public servant, who is also the grandson of immigrants who fled antisemitism in Russia, Merrick Garland will bring a critical perspective to the office of U.S. Attorney General,” Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, said in an interview. Greenblatt added that he’s looking forward to seeing Garland tackle the numerous challenges the country is facing, “including rising hate crimes and violent domestic extremism, and the imperative of racial justice.”

Alejandro Mayorkas: Secretary, Dept. of Homeland Security

Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas by the Forward

By Mark Makela/Getty Images

Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas on November 24, 2020 in Wilmington, Delaware
Born in Havana, Cuba, Mayorkas, 60, would be the first foreign-born person to run the nation’s top public security agency since its creation in 2002. His father was a Cuban native with a Sephardic background, and his mother fled Romania to Cuba amid Nazi persecution in the early 1940s. The Mayorkas family immigrated to the U.S. in 1960 following the Cuban revolution and the ascendance of Fidel Castro.
For most of the 1990s, Mayorkas served as a federal prosecutor in California focused on white-collar crime; President Clinton appointed him U.S. Attorney for Los Angeles in 1998.
In the U.S. Attorney’s office, Mayorkas created the Civil Rights Section to prosecute hate crimes and other acts of intolerance and discrimination. During the Obama administration, Mayorkas served as director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and then deputy Homeland Security secretary.

Uri Herscher receives the Outstanding American by Choice Award on April 13, 2016 from then-Deputy Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorcas by the Forward

Why my friend Ali Mayorkas will be an ideal Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security

Uri HerscherNovember 24, 2020

Last year, Mayorkas joined the board of the Jewish refugee aid group HIAS. Mark Hetfield, the group’s CEO, said that Mayorkas personal and family immigration history “means he has no illusions about where threats to our country come from.”

“DHS has been so focused on foreign threats, and they’ve woken up to the fact that actually most of the threats to this country are right here at home,” Hetfield added. “And I think that’s something that the Mayorkas family is familiar with — that the threads don’t always come from outside the country. So I think he’s in a good position in terms of his psyche to deal with that.”
ADL’s Greenblatt, who worked with Mayorkas in the Obama administration, described him as a “person of the highest integrity” and as someone who worked closely with Jewish groups for many years “to improve Jewish communal security.” Mayorkas, who was a volunteer lay leader at ADL, often said that his beliefs about national and communal security “were informed by the lack of security he felt as a Jew in his native Cuba,” Greenblatt added.

Secretary of Homeland Security nominee Alejandro Mayorkas by the Forward

Jewish leaders to Mayorkas: DHS needs liaison focused on domestic terror

Jacob KornbluhJanuary 10, 2021

Avril Haines: Director of National Intelligence

Avril Haines by the Forward

By CHANDAN KHANNA/Getty Imag...

Nominated Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines on November 24, 2020.
Haines, 51, grew up in Manhattan, and lost her mother at age 15. Her father, Thomas, wrote in a recent memoir that when he took her on a trip to Israel, some Israeli men encouraged her to move there.

After graduating from the University of Chicago and Georgetown University Law Center. Haines worked at the Hague Conference on Private International Law and later as a clerk for Judge Danny Julian Boggs of the U.S. Court of Appeals. She joined the State Department in 2003, and also worked on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee when Biden was its chairman.

In 2010, Haines joined the Obama White House as deputy assistant to the president and deputy counsel for national security affairs. She later served as deputy CIA director and then replaced Blinken as deputy national security adviser.

Haines was among the signatories on a letter circulated last year urging the Democratic National Committee to adopt harsher language on Israel and settlements in the party’s 2020 platform.

Like Yellen, Haines would become the first woman to hold this position.

Wendy Sherman: Deputy Secretary of State

Enough for a minyan: A Jewish Who’s Who of Biden’s Cabinet-to-Be by the Forward

Image by Getty Images
Sherman, 71, would also become the first woman in the role; she previously made history as the first woman undersecretary of state for political affairs in 2009.

In a 2018 memoir, Sherman, who grew up in Baltimore, recounted the disappointing moment when she was notified by then-Secretary of State John Kerry that she wouldn’t replace Bill Burns as deputy secretary when he retired in 2014 (Burns is Biden’s nominee to head the CIA.

“On a Friday, the eve of Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar, Secretary Kerry called me to his office. The president, he informed me, had decided on Tony [Blinken],” she wrote. Sherman took the news very hard, breaking into tears as she packed up to go home to the final meal before the Yom Kippur fast and for evening services at the synagogue. “I spent the holiday in mourning,” she recalled.

Sherman served as lead negotiator for the Obama administration on the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, and will likely play a prominent role in the Biden administration’s negotiations with the signatories of the JCPOA and in potential talks with Tehran.

Rachel Levine: Assistant Secretary of Health

Dr. Rachel Levine by the Forward

Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons
Levine, 64, originally from Wakefield, Massachusetts, became on Tuesday the first openly transgender person nominated for a Senate-confirmed position. Currently, Levine is serving as Pennsylvania’s health secretary. NCJW’s Katz noted that Biden had pledged to make his Cabinet look like America, “and so far, it does.” Katz said she’s thrilled that for the first time, the majority of roles given to women is going to people of color. “These are diversity appointees, and that includes Jews, women, Black and indigenous people, representing the full diversity of our nation.”

Eric Lander: Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy

Eric Lander by the Forward

By Alex Wong/Getty Images

Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) nominee and presidential science adviser designate Eric Lander on January 16, 2021.

Another Brooklyn native, Lander, 63, was named in 2008 as co-chair of Obama’s council of advisers on science and technology, a group of prominent volunteer experts from outside the federal government.

He is currently director of the Broad Institute of M.I.T. and Harvard. Biden has made the role, which has been vacant for 18 months, a Cabinet-level post; Lander is expected to be a critical adviser to the president on the coronavirus pandemic and climate change, among other issues.

Ann Neuberger: Deputy National Security Adviser for Cybersecurity

Enough for a minyan: A Jewish Who’s Who of Biden’s Cabinet-to-Be by the Forward

Image by Courtesy of the NSA

Anne Neuberger
Born and raised in Brooklyn’s Orthodox neighborhood of Borough Parkand a graduate of Bais Yaakov, Neuberger, 45, will serve in this newly-created role. She will be responsible for coordinating the federal government’s cybersecurity efforts, a priority of the Biden administration. Neuberger joined the NSA in 2009 and served as the agency’s director of cybersecurity in the past two years.

Her parents, George and Renne Karfunkel, were among the passengers on the hijacked Air France flight that landed and was rescued by Israeli commandos in Uganda’s Entebbe Airport in 1976. In a 2018 interview Neuberger said she is thrilled to be seen as a role model for young women in the Jewish community.

Nathan Diament, the Orthodox Union’s executive director for public policy, called her appointment — along with Mayorkas’s nomination — an “historic” moment for American Jews. “It’s historic to have some of these people in these roles, and hopefully it will be good for the country,” he said.

David Cohen: Deputy CIA Director

This will be the second time serving in this role for Cohen, who is 58, grew up in Boston and graduated from Yale. In 2015, Cohen became the second highest-ranking Jew in the spy agency’s hierarchy. He previously served in the treasury department as assistant secretary for terrorist financing and then undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, earning the nickname of America’s “sanctions guru.”

Because his position does not require Senate confirmation, Cohen will become] acting CIA director after Biden’s inauguration until Burns’s nomination as head of the agency is confirmed.

Doug Emhoff: Second Gentleman

Emhoff, 56, does not have to await Senate confirmation, either — he will make history on Wednesday just by being the first male spouse of a Vice President.. Known to friends as “the Second Mensch”, Emhoff will likely play a key role in the administration in addition to teaching law at Georgetown University.

Presidential candidate Joe Biden. by the Forward

Everything you need to know about Joe Biden’s Jewish relatives

Irene Katz ConnellyNovember 7, 2020

Is it good for the Jews?

“For the Jewish community, these announcements are a source of pride,” said Ann Lewis, who served as White House director of communications for Clinton and is now co-chair of the Democratic Majority of Israel’s board of directors. “I think the political-science team is shepping naches. What they mean for the country will be even greater.”

Troy, who served as White House Jewish Liaison in the George W. Bush administration, said in an interview that the last 20 years has been a “golden period” for Jewish appointees in both Democratic and Republican administrations. “It’s a good thing for Jews so that our views can be represented,” he said. “Obviously there’s more Democratic views than Republican views within our community. But the Jewish perspective definitely gets heard in administrations of both political strikes.”

Tamara Cofman Wittes, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former Obama administration official, said: “It’s not just their Jewish identity, but the way it informs their understanding of what America is and their approach to public service.”

Wittes pointed to the remarks given by Blinken, Garland and Mayorkas when their nominations were announced, in which each alluded to their Jewish background as something that has guided them in their careers.

“These are the stories of the American Jewish community: flight from persecution, America as a place of refuge and opportunity, a place where respect for individual rights and equality under the law are not just foundational principles but fundamental to the promise this country makes to its citizens,” she said. “And that means that their commitment to those principles and to realizing that promise is personal.”

But Isaacson also expressed concern about “the continuing strain of antisemitism that our country has to grapple with, as we saw on display on January 6.”

“There will absolutely be enemies of the Jewish people, enemies of American pluralism, and promoters of hate and violence who will do whatever they can with the fact that a significant number of Jews are in a senior level in the Biden administration,” he said. “We can count on that and we have to be on guard against that.”

Correction: Due to an editing error, the original version of this article incorrectly stated that Merrick Garland’s father was Protestant. He was Jewish.
 
The Republican Study Committee (RSC) called out the “weaknesses” of the Biden administration’s policy towards communist China this week, in part, by exposing the ties between several political appointees, including Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and Beijing.

Ahead of the push, Breitbart News’ Matt Boyle exclusively learned from RSC Chairman Jim Banks (R-IN) that the panel is launching a legislative blitz starting Tuesday against Biden to expose his weaknesses in combating the threat posed by China.

Link: https://www.breitbart.com/politics/...e-money-for-dod-research-linked-universities/

A six-page memo issued by the RSC suggested that the link between the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and Secretary of State Antony Blinken, a long-time Biden confidant now charged with carrying out the U.S. foreign policy agenda, may prompt a conflict of interest when it comes to confronting China.

In describing the links between several Biden picks for influential political positions and China, the RSC chaired by Rep. Banks noted in its memo:

Blinken was the co-founder of the consulting company WestExec Advisors, which according to the Washington Free Beacon, “helped U.S. universities raise money from China without running afoul of Pentagon grant requirements.”

Some of the firm’s work appeared to have U.S. national security implications.

Among other Biden political appointees who did work for the firm is Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Avril Haines, the head of the U.S. intelligence community, and press secretary Jen Psaki, the RSC noted.

The panel also accused Bidens’ U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Linda Thomas Greenfield, a State Department employee with a “history of troubling comments praising and welcoming China’s role in Africa,” of being cozy with Beijing.

In early December 2020, the Washington Free Beacon reported that the Washington, DC-based WestExec firm scrubbed details of its work on China from its website. The move came as the firm’s businesses drew scrutiny after Biden won the presidency.

“The company deleted references to such work from its website between July 26 and August 2, weeks before Biden accepted his nomination at the Democratic National Convention in late August,” the Beacon explained.

Citing an archived version of a West-Exec site, the Free Beacon further noted that the firm worked to help:

U.S. research universities … remain a trusted partner for DoD [Department of Defense]-sponsored research grants while expanding foreign research collaboration, accepting foreign donations, and welcoming foreign students in key STEM [Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics] programs.

During his Senate confirmation hearing on January 19 and afterward, Blinken lauded former President Donald Trump for being “tougher” on China, suggesting that the current administration would embrace at least some components of its predecessor’s policy towards Beijing.

Blinken stressed that Biden would seek to work with China on mutual interest matters such as climate change, a departure from the previous administration.

However, the RSC reported:

Despite tough talk on China, such as Secretary Blinken saying that Trump was right to take a tougher approach to China, the Biden administration’s actions have shown they will do the opposite.

Fundamentally, the Biden administration’s approach to China reflects much of the failed policies and failed team of the Obama administration, which saw China not as a competitor, but [as] a nation that could be engaged on a whole host of issues from climate change to global development.

Rather than pushing China out of key regions such as the Middle East or Africa, the Biden team welcomes Chinese expansion in these areas and believes in the old failed “win-win” approach of cooperation with the CCP, which threatens international security and undermines our alliances. The CCP is seeking to fundamentally reorder the international system in its image based on Communist authoritarianism. The U.S. cannot afford to return to leading from behind and the failed policies of the past.

Blinken has repeatedly stressed that while China poses the most significant challenge of any nation-state to the United States, there are areas where Washington could cooperate with Beijing.
 
54% Of Voters Say Biden Is A “Puppet” Of The Radical Left

By ProTrumpNews Staff
Published February 20, 2021 at 10:30am

 Link: https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2021/02/54-voters-say-biden-puppet-radical-left/

The American people know the truth.

According to a new Rasmussen poll, 54% of voters think Joe Biden is a “puppet” of the radical left.

Agree or Disagree: “Joe Biden’s not the moderate nice guy that they made him out to be. He’s a puppet of the radical left”?

1000 Nat LV’s – Agree % / Disagree %
Democrats – 27% / 68%
Unaffiliated – 54% / 37%
Republicans – 82% / 12%
All Voters – 54% / 40%

Weighted D38,R36,IND26 https://t.co/lOgDgVbwL1

— Rasmussen Reports (@Rasmussen_Poll) February 19, 2021

From Rasmussen:

TRENDING: "Never Mistake My Quiet for Inaction" - Sidney Powell Speaks Out After SCOTUS Meetings Friday on Election Fraud -- Expects Orders and Opinions Next Week

Less than a month after President Joe Biden’s inauguration, most voters believe the Democrat is “a puppet of the radical left” and not the moderate “nice guy” he was portrayed as being during the election campaign.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 54% of Likely U.S. Voters say they agree with this statement: “Joe Biden’s not the moderate nice guy that they made him out to be. He’s a puppet of the radical left.” Forty percent (40%) of voters disagree.

On Thursday, Biden called an early lid due to snow.

Yet Kamala Harris kept her schedule.

Is Kamala taking over?

Joe Biden Skips Michigan Trip, Calls an Early “Lid” at White House – Kamala Harris Takes Over All In-Person Events

She is also beginning to take calls from foreign leaders.

Developing: Kamala Harris Already Taking Calls from Foreign Leaders for China Joe — Media Still Ignores His Obvious Dementia

The American people see what’s happening.
 
HUGE CONFLICT UNCOVERED: Janet Yellen Made Over $7 Million in 2020 for Speeches (on ZOOM Calls) During COVID from Citi Alone

07:28 - News

Link: http://www.stationgossip.com/2021/08/huge-conflict-uncovered-janet-yellen.html

In January it was reported that Janet Yellen made more than $1 million in speaking fees from Citidel. Now we find out Yellen made $7 million in speaking fees in 2020 from Citibank alone.

In January we reported that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had received $1 million in speaking fees from Citidel in 2020.

Overnight we found out that this was small potatoes.

The US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has been accused of corruption due to receiving $7.2 million in ‘speaking fees’ from just Citi bank and the Citadel hedge fund.

“Since much of America was locked down in 2020, those speeches are almost all Zoom calls, done from her home. $7.2 million total,” Bruce Fenton, a long time bitcoiner, says.

Yellen’s official limited disclosure reveals she received millions more from other banks like Barclays, BNP, UBS, and more.

That indicates that her incentives are completely misaligned because her government salary is just $221,400 a year, while just Citi has paid her more than $7 million.

Moreover while this sum might look like a small amount for an open bribe, Yellen’s wealth is estimated to be $20 million, so she has been given in one year almost half her net worth by just one bank.

The USA is for sale in the Biden Administration. Policies are put in place for the highest bidder.
 
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