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Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch to MKs: “I Heard the Bismuth Proposal — I Will Respond Later”

Matzav -

Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch convened a high-level meeting Tuesday night with senior Degel HaTorah representatives to deliberate a historic crossroads: whether to support the Israeli government’s proposed draft law or head toward new elections.

The meeting, held at Rav Hirsch’s home on Rechov Harav Sher in Bnei Brak, was attended by MKs Moshe Gafni, Uri Maklev, Yaakov Asher, and former MK Yitzchok Pindrus.

During the discussion, the delegation presented the details of the Bismuth draft framework, reviewing each clause of the proposal.

When asked what message to convey to Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu, Rav Hirsch replied, “Tell him that I have heard the proposal and will give my answer later.”

The Rosh Yeshiva emphasized the need for unwavering protection of every bochur in the yeshivos, saying that “not a single hair on the head of any yeshiva student should be harmed,” and stressed that the safeguard must extend to both Sephardic institutions and yeshivos for weaker students.

Political observers described the meeting as a pivotal juncture. If Rav Hirsch ultimately grants his backing to the draft law, the government is expected to pass it within weeks—with Shas’s Moetzet Chachmei HaTorah likely to follow suit once Rav Hirsch approves the wording. Should he oppose it, however, analysts predict the coalition could collapse swiftly.

“Everything now runs through Bnei Brak,” a senior Likud official said. “This is no longer a legal or security matter—it’s a halachic and political question that will determine the government’s future.”

The street outside Rav Hirsch’s modest home was filled with journalists and television crews broadcasting live updates from Rechov Harav Sher 17, where—behind closed doors—the fate of the government may soon be decided: a new draft law, or new elections.

{Matzav.com}

Body of Fallen Soldier Itay Chen Returned to Israel

Matzav -

The nation awoke to somber news early Wednesday as the Prime Minister’s Office confirmed that the body of abducted IDF soldier Sergeant Itay Chen had been returned to Israel by the Hamas terrorist organization.

“Following the completion of the identification process by the National Center of Forensic Medicine, in coordination with the Israel Police and the Military Rabbinate, IDF representatives informed the family of the abducted fallen soldier, Sergeant Itay Chen, that their loved one has been returned to Israel and positively identified,” the statement read.

The announcement expressed the state’s profound grief and its continuing mission to recover every soldier who has not yet been brought home. “The Government of Israel shares in the deep sorrow of the Chen family and of all the families of the abducted fallen. The government and the entire security and intelligence apparatus of the State of Israel are determined, committed, and working tirelessly to bring all our abducted fallen back for proper burial in their homeland.”

Military officials said that Chen lost his life while fighting bravely in a tank battle near Kibbutz Nir Oz on the morning of October 7, 2023, before being taken by Hamas militants.

Only 19 years old at the time of his death, Itay’s passing was formally confirmed on March 10, 2024. He leaves behind his parents, Ruby and Hagit, and two brothers. Chen was also the final hostage in Gaza who held American citizenship.

Israel believes Hamas is still holding the remains of seven other hostages murdered in captivity.

Earlier in the day, the IDF had confirmed that a coffin containing the remains of a hostage had been handed over by Hamas to the Red Cross, which then transferred it to Israeli authorities.

Upon its arrival, the coffin was received in a solemn military ceremony led by an IDF rabbi before being taken to the Health Ministry’s National Center of Forensic Medicine for identification.

“Hamas is required to uphold the agreement and take the necessary steps to return all the deceased hostages,” the IDF stated.

{Matzav.com}

Shmuel Ellenbogen Elected as First Orthodox Jewish Ocean County Commissioner

Matzav -

In a groundbreaking victory, Shmuel “Sam” Ellenbogen of Toms River, NJ has been elected to the Ocean County Board of Commissioners, marking the first time an Orthodox Jew will hold a countywide office in Ocean County’s history.

The win places him on the powerful five-member board that manages the county’s infrastructure, public safety, and social services for nearly 650,000 residents.

Ellenbogen’s election caps years of steady public involvement and bridge-building. A familiar name in local civic circles, he co-founded the Toms River Jewish Community Council (TRJCC) in 2018, creating a platform to strengthen understanding between the rapidly growing Orthodox community and their non-Jewish neighbors. The council’s work—ranging from public safety education to interfaith dialogue and community relations—earned him widespread respect across the political and religious spectrum.

His first official government appointment came in 2021 when he joined the Ocean County Utilities Authority, where he eventually became treasurer. In that role, Ellenbogen helped oversee large-scale infrastructure expansion to meet the region’s explosive population growth, particularly in areas like Toms River, Lakewood, and Jackson.

{Matzav.com}

BREAKING: Democrat Mikie Sherrill Wins New Jersey Governor’s Race Over Jack Ciattarelli

Yeshiva World News -

BREAKING: Democrat Mikie Sherrill Defeats Republican Jack Ciattarelli in New Jersey Governor’s Race Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill has won New Jersey’s gubernatorial race, defeating Republican Jack Ciattarelli in one of the nation’s most closely watched off-year elections. STORY ON LAKEWOOD ALERTS: https://lakewoodalerts.com/breaking-democrat-mikie-sherrill-defeats-republican-jack-ciattarelli-in-new-jersey-governors-race/

MIKIE BEATS JACK: Sherrill Defeats Ciattarelli, Making History as New Jersey’s Next Governor

Matzav -

Democrat Mikie Sherrill has won the New Jersey gubernatorial race, defeating Republican Jack Ciattarelli, according to projections from Decision Desk HQ.

The victory marks a major milestone for the Garden State, with Sherrill set to become New Jersey’s second woman — and the first Democratic woman — to hold the governor’s office.

A former Navy helicopter pilot and federal prosecutor, Sherrill first gained national attention in 2018 when she flipped a Republican seat in northern New Jersey during President Donald Trump’s first term. Her campaign this year emphasized economic relief, affordability, and restoring stability, while her opponent, Ciattarelli, a three-time GOP gubernatorial contender and former state assemblyman, leaned heavily on his close alliance with Trump.

Polls showed a close race between the two candidates, with Sherrill holding a single-digit lead over Ciattarelli in the final stretch of the race. That narrow margin reflected the tense mood in New Jersey, where cost-of-living concerns and the national political climate fueled a heated contest to the finish line.

The election was widely viewed as an indicator of the country’s broader sentiment less than a year into Trump’s second term. Once considered a reliably Democratic stronghold, New Jersey saw a pronounced shift toward Republicans in recent years, driven by working-class voters and non-White communities drawn to Trump’s populist message. In 2021, Ciattarelli came within three percentage points of unseating Democratic Governor Phil Murphy, who was unable to seek re-election due to term limits.

Sherrill’s path to political prominence began long before her entry into public office. After graduating from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1994, she became part of the first generation of women permitted to fly combat missions. She served nine years in the Navy before earning a law degree from Georgetown University, later joining the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Newark, where she worked as a prosecutor before turning to politics.

Her early congressional career placed her among a cohort of moderate Democrats with military and intelligence backgrounds. That group included figures such as Elissa Slotkin, who won a U.S. Senate seat in Michigan, and Abigail Spanberger, now running for governor in Virginia. Like her peers, Sherrill has built a reputation as a pragmatic lawmaker with a focus on security, bipartisanship, and middle-class issues.

The first woman governor of New Jersey was Republican Christine Todd Whitman, who served from 1994 to 2001. With her victory, Sherrill joins Whitman in breaking barriers — this time from the opposite side of the political spectrum — as she prepares to lead a deeply divided state at a pivotal moment in national politics.

{Matzav.com}

BREAKING: Democrat Mikie Sherrill Defeats Republican Jack Ciattarelli in New Jersey Governor’s Race

Yeshiva World News -

Democratic Rep. Mikie Sherrill has won New Jersey’s gubernatorial race, defeating Republican Jack Ciattarelli in one of the nation’s most closely watched off-year elections. Sherrill, a former Navy helicopter pilot and federal prosecutor who has served in Congress since 2019, will become the Garden State’s 57th governor when she is sworn in on Jan. 20, […]

BREAKING: Shmuel “Sam” Ellenbogen Makes History, Elected as First Orthodox Jewish Ocean County Commissioner

Yeshiva World News -

BREAKING: Shmuel “Sam” Ellenbogen Makes History, Elected as First Orthodox Jewish Ocean County Commissioner Shmuel “Sam” Ellenbogen, a longtime askan from Toms River, has become the first Orthodox Jew elected to a countywide position in Ocean County history, winning a seat on the Ocean County Board of Commissioners. STORY ON LAKEWOOD ALERTS: https://lakewoodalerts.com/breaking-shmuel-sam-ellenbogen-makes-history-elected-as-first-orthodox-jewish-ocean-county-commissioner/

Polygraph Uncovers MAG WhatsApp Group Behind Video Leak

Matzav -

Fresh revelations about the lie-detector test that exposed Military Advocate General Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi’s role in the Sde Teiman affair have shed light on what investigators describe as a deliberate and coordinated effort within the upper ranks of the IDF’s legal division.

The chain of events began when a high-ranking officer underwent a standard Shin Bet polygraph exam as part of her candidacy for promotion. When asked, “Did you commit a crime?” she unexpectedly confessed that she had leaked a video allegedly showing abuse of a captured terrorist — and said she did so under direct instructions from the MAG.

The Shin Bet relayed her confession to Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara and to the police, who promptly launched a criminal probe into the matter.

Last Tuesday, investigators employed a deceptive tactic to gather additional information. Pretending to be someone from another office, one officer called and asked the woman to come to a different location at the Kirya Base. When she showed up, she was promptly detained and transported to police headquarters on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv for questioning.

During her first interrogation, the officer offered only limited cooperation. Authorities confiscated her phone, released her, and barred her from contacting anyone connected to the investigation.

Two days later, she reached out to police voluntarily, requesting another interrogation. This time, she provided a full account of what had transpired.

According to her statement, she was part of a WhatsApp group that included seven senior officers from the Military Advocate General’s Corps — among them Tomer-Yerushalmi herself. After the Sde Teiman controversy erupted, one participant wrote, “I hope this storm blows over.” Another member lashed out at IDF Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi and military spokesman Daniel Hagari, complaining, “They aren’t defending us here.”

Members of the group debated two potential strategies — holding a discreet press briefing without sharing case files, or selectively leaking the material. Tomer-Yerushalmi dismissed the first option, arguing that “a briefing would not have the same effect,” and declared, “Now we take this into our own hands.”

Once the footage was released, the group felt their move had achieved its intended impact. But when a petition later reached the Supreme Court, the MAG ordered an internal probe to identify the source of the leak — and ironically assigned the very deputy who had helped orchestrate it to lead the investigation.

{Matzav.com}

Note To JD Vance: Catering To Extremism Is A Losing Political Strategy

Matzav -

By Jonathan S. Tobin

Recent events have been an object lesson in the basic truth of the “horseshoe theory” of politics. The theory argues that the far left and the far right are almost always closer to each other in their ideas and even their tactics than either is to the political center and the people who are presumably on the same side of the great issues of the day. Rather than a linear continuum, the political alignment is, in effect, a horseshoe-shaped diagram.

Nothing better illustrates this than the way antisemites on the left and the right have been working from the same playbook. Both Democratic Socialist New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani and conservative political commentator Tucker Carlson share a hatred for Israel and its Jewish supporters. Each not only taps into anti-Jewish sentiments latent in society. They also speak to growing constituencies within the Democratic and Republican parties that share this point of view and such prejudices.

Mainstreaming antisemitism

At this point, there are two questions to ask about both sides.

One is whether their ideas, which might have been dismissed as inherently marginal only a few years ago, have been mainstreamed in public discourse. The other is whether or not, once that has been accomplished, their toxic views about Israel and the Jews will come to dominate America’s two main political parties, and thus eventually be transformed from ideological obsessions to policy.

With respect to the Democrats, the answer to both questions appears to be “yes.”

When it comes to the Republicans, the answer is far from conclusive. President Donald Trump and most conservatives, as well as members of the GOP, are pro-Israel and philo-semitic. But as we saw last week with the shocking decision of the Heritage Foundation, a highly influential think tank in Washington, D.C., to come to the defense of Carlson after he aired a podcast when he gave a friendly platform to neo-Nazi hatemonger Nick Fuentes, it’s now indisputable that the right has its own very serious antisemitism problem.

Still, unlike the acquiescence and support that Mamdani’s candidacy has generated from within his party, the pushback against Heritage president Kevin Roberts among Republicans has been as loud as it was encouraging. Indeed, most of the conservative ecosphere seemed to react with outrage against Roberts’ shocking video in which he cast those opposed to Carlson’s stands as a “venomous coalition” as well as seemed to indicate that there was something sinister about supporters of Israel, both Jewish and evangelical Christians, who believed the podcaster and his prejudiced views had no place in the GOP mainstream. The outrage among employees and donors at Heritage, which has devoted considerable resources to support for Israel and targeting antisemitism via its “Project Esther,” was also considerable.

As Commentary magazine executive editor Abe Greenwald aptly noted: “The right responded to half a dozen Jew-hating podcasters and one think tank president with overwhelming and immediate condemnation. The left encouraged two years of abject pro-jihad support and terrorism to thrive without ever putting its foot down.”

Is JD Vance Trump’s successor?

The key to the future of the GOP, however, may lie with someone who was conspicuously silent about the controversies over the Carlson-Fuentes podcast and the situation at Heritage. By that, I don’t refer to Trump but to the person who is the current favorite to succeed him as the Republican Party’s presidential nominee: Vice President JD Vance.

Though three years is a lifetime in politics, Vance has not only been anointed by Trump, along with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, as the only viable GOP candidates in 2028, but his rapid rise to popularity on the right should not be underestimated. His embrace of populist national conservative positions on a host of issues has earned him the special contempt of the liberal media, but it has further endeared him to his party’s voters, as the very early 2028 polls have indicated.

And that is why Vance’s continued embrace of Carlson is deeply troubling. It raises questions about his political judgment and his moral compass.

Vance and Carlson have been friends for years. Carlson actively promoted Vance’s successful run for the Senate in 2022, especially in a difficult multi-candidate GOP primary, which he wound up winning easily, though with less than a third of all votes cast, on his prime-time Fox News show. In 2024, he played an active and reportedly decisive role in persuading Trump to tap Vance for the vice presidential nomination.

So, aside from any feelings of friendship, Vance owes Carlson. That’s part of the reason why he refused to disassociate himself from him even after Carlson hosted a Holocaust denier on his podcast in September 2024 and continued to make joint appearances with him during the campaign.

And when given the honor of hosting Charlie Kirk’s podcast on the first episode after the activist’s assassination in September, Vance invited Carlson to join him, among other prominent guests, in a program broadcast from the White House.

That’s astonishing when you consider that Carlson has smeared Christian supporters of Israel like Kirk as guilty of “heresy” and suffering from a “brain virus” in his friendly interview with the antisemitic “groyper” Fuentes.

It also stands in strong contrast to Vance’s strongly articulated views about the importance of the U.S.-Israel alliance. But, as Vance made clear in a disturbing exchange with a student voicing antisemitic smears of Israel at a Turning Point USA event at the University of Mississippi, he also is acting as if he is concerned about keeping Carlson-style Israel-haters or even Fuentes’ groypers inside the GOP tent.

In comments that brought to mind then-Vice President Kamala Harris’ response to a left-wing student who voiced blood libels against Israel, Vance chose not to chide or even disagree with his questioner, but instead to signal his solidarity with their concerns that Israel is manipulating Washington.

All of which raises the question as to whether Vance really thinks the path to winning the presidency or even a successful rest of Trump’s term lies in retaining the support of the small but vocal far-right extremist wing of the GOP.

Democrats’ costly tilt to the left

If so, he may be making the same sort of mistaken calculation that many Democrats have made.

Over the past decade, the Democratic Party’s intersectional left-wing has become a dominant factor in its politics as it went from skepticism about the U.S.-Israel alliance to one of hostility, and now, apparent comfort with open antisemitism. That was made obvious during the 2024 presidential campaign when President Joe Biden and Harris demonstrated that they were far more fearful of losing the votes of the anti-Israel left than they were of fending them off.

Any doubt about the direction of Democratic Party discourse has been removed by the current New York City mayoral campaign in which Mamdani has been largely embraced by the Democratic establishment, despite his vocal antisemitic stands, not to mention his Marxist economic program. While some Jewish Democrats have sounded the alarm about him, they are clearly in the minority. Party leaders have either reluctantly made their peace with him or, like former President Barack Obama, have become his enthusiastic backers and mentors.

The liberal media, including its leading outlets like The New York Times, has gone down a similar path. That’s hardly surprising given the fact that publications like the Times have mainstreamed anti-Zionist views that negate Jewish rights, while published Hamas propaganda and blood libels against Israel and the Jews. In such an environment, Mamdani’s extremist views are made to appear legitimate, if not reasonable.

The notion that a “no-enemies-on-the-left” policy—in which the anti-Israel and Jew-hating faction of the Democrats is embraced, rather than expelled—is politically wise ignores everything we know about American politics, both historically and in the present day.

Democrats lost in 2024 for a number of reasons, not the least of which was their denial of Biden’s mental incapacity until it was late in the campaign, and then his replacement by an incompetent and unpopular candidate in Harris. A more important explanation for their troubles was a matter of the broad center of the electorate’s dislike for the way Democrats had embraced the concerns of woke progressives and credentialed elites. Their obsessions with race via the diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) woke catechism, gender ideology, open borders, restricting gun rights and climate change doomed them with the working-class voters of all races who cared far more about stopping illegal immigration, crime and the opioid epidemic.

In the same way, the Democrats’ more hostile attitude toward Israel and their failure to take a strong stand against pro-Hamas mobs on college campuses, at the very least, didn’t help and may well have contributed to their problems.

That’s the context for the choice that rests before Republicans, and most particularly, Vance, as they ponder the same question about how to deal with their own extremists.

Some might argue that the broad turn against Israel in American public opinion since the Hamas-led Palestinian Arab attacks on the Jewish state on Oct. 7, 2023, should lead Republicans to do as the Democrats have done. In stark contrast to their opponents, Republicans remain overwhelmingly supportive of Israel. The margin on this issue, however, is far smaller when it comes to younger GOP voters, who, like their counterparts on the left, also get much of their information about the world from TikTok and other dubious sources.

Extremists are political poison

Still, Vance and any other Republican who might think there are more votes to be gotten by clinging to Carlson than by behaving responsibly, and having nothing to do with him and his even more extreme and hateful friends and podcast guests, is likely wrong. A “no-enemies-on-the-right” strategy would be a blunder.

U.S. elections are largely won by candidates who show that they are not beholden to crackpots, let alone willing to embrace vile hate-mongers like those that Carlson thinks deserve a platform. That was the lesson learned by Biden and Harris, whose inability to distance themselves from woke progressives with extreme views was out of touch with most Americans. The way the media has published Hamas propaganda about “genocide” and “famine” as facts rather than fiction has hurt Israel’s image and bolstered an international backlash against Jews and Israel. Still, the notion that the kind of Jew-hatred Carlson is enabling and promoting is popular remains detached from reality.

Many Americans, and especially Jews, are alarmed about the prospect of Mamdani using his power to harm Israel and its supporters, as well as to negatively impact the lives of Jewish New Yorkers. A great many national Republicans, however, have appeared gleeful about the prospect of Mamdani becoming the poster child for a left-leaning Democratic Party. Should the Democrats continue their drift to the left, with perhaps fellow Democratic Socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) running for president in 2028, the expectation among political observers is that this is a prescription for a colossal defeat. Extremism has always been political poison, and there’s no reason to think that’s changing.

With that in mind, if Vance wants to claim the political center and succeed Trump in the White House, he’d do well to keep his distance from Carlson and his groyper pals in the next three years. Despite the way primary and base politics exerts a centrifugal pull of leaders to the margins where left and right-wing extremists have so much in common, that’s also the way to lose touch with ordinary voters, as both Democrats and Republicans should have learned by now.

Jonathan S. Tobin is editor-in-chief of JNS.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Issues Call to “Kollel and Yeshiva Students” in Lakewood and Jackson

Matzav -

President Donald Trump issued a strong appeal on Election Day to Orthodox Jewish voters in New Jersey, praising their turnout and urging even greater participation in support of Republican gubernatorial candidate Jack Ciattarelli.

In a Truth Social post, Trump wrote that he had been informed that “32,000 Orthodox Jews around Lakewood and Jackson, New Jersey, have showed up BIG for Jack Ciattarelli.” He called the community “my friends in this Great Community” and thanked them for recognizing “how important this Election is to New Jersey, and to our Country.”

Trump stressed that there was still time to vote, issuing a passionate call to action: “I am asking ALL PATRIOTIC CITIZENS OF THE GREAT STATE OF NEW JERSEY, including all Kollel and Yeshiva students who haven’t voted yet, to please GET OUT AND VOTE FOR JACK CIATTARELLI.”

Emphasizing the potential impact of the Orthodox community’s vote, Trump declared, “You can win this Election for Jack! VOTE FOR JACK, WHO HAS MY COMPLETE AND TOTAL ENDORSEMENT.”

He reminded voters that polls close at 8 p.m. and underscored that anyone already in line by then must be allowed to cast their ballot: “IF YOU ARE IN LINE BY 8 P.M., STAY IN LINE, AND THEY MUST LET YOU VOTE!”

The message appeared just hours before polls closed in a race expected to be closely watched as a bellwether for upcoming national elections. Trump’s post was widely shared among Orthodox community networks, particularly in Lakewood and Jackson, where voter turnout has been exceptionally strong throughout the day.

{Matzav.com}

Hedge Fund Tycoon Cliff Asness Rips Zohran Mamdani’s Rent Freeze Plan As ‘Hydrogen Bomb’ For NYC

Matzav -

Billionaire hedge fund manager Cliff Asness tore into New York City mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani’s rent-freeze proposal, warning it would devastate the city’s housing market. The outspoken financier didn’t mince words when describing the impact of Mamdani’s plan to prohibit rent increases on rent-stabilized apartments.

“Rent control is one of the few issues almost all economists agree destroys the city. So let’s triple down. Genius,” Asness told The New York Post on Tuesday, his sarcasm highlighting his belief that the policy would cripple the market.

He went on to draw a grim comparison to past housing restrictions. “A rent freeze is the hydrogen bomb to the atomic bomb of regular rent controls,” he said, describing the plan as an extreme escalation of already damaging regulation.

Asness, 59, who is Jewish and has been an outspoken critic of Mamdani’s far-left views, also ridiculed the assemblyman’s failure to condemn Hamas and his embrace of the slogan “globalize the intifada.” “Come for the communism, stay for the globalizing of the intifada. Shrewd, New York City,” Asness quipped. “I wish I lived in NYC so I could join those moving out to Texas or Florida if he wins.”

The AQR Capital Management founder has a long record of pushing back against antisemitism and anti-Israel rhetoric. After the October 7 attacks and the subsequent war in Gaza, Asness condemned Mamdani’s comments on Israel, and in 2023, he halted donations to the University of Pennsylvania after it hosted what he called an “antisemitic Burning Man fest.”

Asness, who launched his quantitative hedge fund in Manhattan in 1998 before relocating to Greenwich, Connecticut in 2004, now oversees $165 billion in assets. His remarks echoed those of other major figures in finance who view Mamdani’s economic ideas as reckless.

Fortress Investment Group co-CEO Drew McKnight previously warned that Mamdani’s housing platform would devastate New York’s property market. “You’ll just make it impossible to have new supply. Unfortunately, it could do damage to the people he’s trying to help,” McKnight told The Post in an earlier interview.

The warnings come as the mayoral race tightens. A new poll released Monday showed Mamdani barely ahead, holding 43.9% support to independent Andrew Cuomo’s 39.4%, with Republican candidate Curtis Sliwa far behind at 15.5%.

Critics note that Mamdani himself personally benefits from rent stabilization. Despite earning $143,000 a year as a state legislator, he lives with his wife in a rent-stabilized one-bedroom apartment in Astoria, Queens, paying just $2,300 per month.

The city’s rent stabilization system governs about one million apartments, limiting annual rent increases as determined by a mayor-appointed board. While designed to help low- and middle-income tenants, many wealthier residents also occupy the below-market units.

Wall Street insiders have been increasingly uneasy about Mamdani’s economic agenda, fearing his victory could trigger major disruption to New York’s financial ecosystem. Several firms have reportedly discussed moving operations to Dallas to avoid potential new taxes championed by left-wing policymakers.

Back in July, a meeting between Mamdani and top finance executives arranged by business leader Kathryn Wylde fell apart when several CEOs, including JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon, refused to attend — a sign of the growing rift between New York’s financial establishment and its possible next mayor.

{Matzav.com}

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