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Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.’s running mate, Nicole Shanahan, presents several areas of appeal to key constituencies for both President Biden and former President Trump, as Democrats and Republicans look to stave off Kennedy’s campaign for president. 

‘Shanahan is an unknown quantity,’ said Kevin Madden, former senior adviser to Utah Sen. Mitt Romney’s presidential campaigns in 2008 and 2012. ‘If she can bring a fresh, dynamic approach to the campaign, she has a chance to tap into a very real market of voters who want anything but a 2020 rematch.’

Last week, Kennedy announced the 38-year-old attorney, tech entrepreneur and mother as the vice president on his 2024 ticket. The campaign had to announce a running mate to begin gathering signatures to gain ballot access in several states. 

Lisa Bryant, political science department chairwoman at California State University, Fresno said, ‘She will likely help draw some attention to the campaign from women voters and possibly first-gen voters and [people of color] as people become more familiar with her.’ 

Who exactly Shanahan will appeal to, and which candidate that in turn hurts, remains unknown. Like Kennedy, his running mate has some qualities that align with those on the left and others that do so on the right. 

‘The only candidate that… I really don’t think any Moms for Liberty members are going to vote for would be Joe Biden,’ said Moms for Liberty co-founder Tiffany Justice in an interview with Fox News Digital on Monday. 

Kennedy was slated to speak to the conservative group at their Philadelphia summit last summer when he was still running against Biden in the Democratic primary. However, Justice said he backed out at the last minute, which disappointed members who were interested in hearing from him. 

Now, Kennedy is running as an independent, and Justice explained that there is still a level of interest in his campaign from some members, pointing specifically to mothers whose children may have suffered injuries allegedly from vaccines. 

Bryant claimed Shanahan’s ‘vaccine skepticism’ could be more attractive to ‘right-leaning voters,’ but added, ‘she might also appeal to those on the left who still believe vaccines are linked to autism.’

David Darmofal, a political scientist at the University of South Carolina, reiterated that Shanahan is not well-known, remarking she ‘probably doesn’t have the name recognition to currently draw disproportionately from either Democratic- or Republican-leaning voters.’

He explained that she could likely ‘reinforce Kennedy’s anti-system message and provide help for the campaign with donations.’

Madden wasn’t sure whether Trump or Biden would be more affected by Kennedy and Shanahan’s ticket. But he explained that regardless, Shanahan fits the profile of some of the most important voters in November: suburban women in critical battleground counties. It’s not yet clear what level of impact Shanahan’s involvement could have on this core constituency, he explained.

Currently, Trump is at a disadvantage with women, who were credited with delivering Biden the win in 2020. According to a March Quinnipiac poll, Biden is winning with women as a whole and with White women, who previously swung for Trump in 2016.

In the survey, 48% of female registered voters said they supported Biden, while 30% chose Trump and 12% opted for Kennedy. Among White women, 46% stuck with Biden, 33% said they would vote for Trump and 13% would choose Kennedy. 

As 2024 appears poised to be a rematch of 2020, strategists have highlighted women, specifically suburban and in battleground states, as one of the most critical voting groups. 

Madden, who has experience with running mate decisions, emphasized the importance of chemistry between those on the ticket. At the end of the day, he stressed that they needed to like each other.

According to Democratic strategist Eric Koch, Kennedy’s selection had more to do with finances than any kind of voter appeal. She ‘can help him buy ballot access,’ he said, adding that voters won’t be swayed by Kennedy’s ‘scam.’ 

Democratic National Committee spokesperson Matt Corridoni, who the Biden campaign referred Fox News Digital to when asked for comment, echoed this. ‘She has money they can use to help buy their way onto the ballot.’ 

But political scientists noted that Shanahan’s money provides an important resource for Kennedy. ‘She can give unlimited amounts of money to the campaign,’ explained Christopher Devine, a University of Dayton assistant professor of political science and co-author of ‘Do Running Mates Matter?’

With her, Kennedy has ‘a much better chance of getting on state ballots across the country and winning a larger share of the national popular vote,’ he said. 

She ‘has deep pockets and Silicon Valley connections,’ said Bernard Tamas, an associate political science professor at Valdosta State University and author of ‘The Demise and Rebirth of American Third Parties.’

And despite the Kennedy campaign’s lack of ‘the structure of a typically successful third party,’ Shanahan’s money puts them in a better position than many other independent bids, he said.

Her value may only be in the short term, however. ‘As someone who likewise has no political experience, she is a poor choice for Kennedy in the long term,’ Devine claimed. 

‘Her effectiveness will largely depend on how voters respond to her as they learn more and see her in action over the course of the campaign,’ said Madden. 

Bryant agreed, noting her presentation on the trail ‘will be the real test.’

In a statement, Kennedy press secretary Stefanie Spear said, ‘We are neither right nor left, neither liberal nor conservative. The key policy positions that Mr. Kennedy and Ms. Shanahan share defy those categories.’

Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung felt differently. ‘RFK Jr. is a radical leftist,’ he claimed.

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Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., is accusing Israel of killing seven humanitarian aid workers from World Central Kitchen (WCK) in Gaza on purpose.

‘The Israeli government knew that humanitarian workers were in this vehicle,’ Tlaib wrote on her Instagram Story on Tuesday morning. Alongside the text, she shared a video of a badly damaged car with a massive hole in its roof that partially destroyed what appeared to be a brightly marked WCK logo.

Another post showed a graphic photo of what appeared to be a deceased aid worker along with a photo of purportedly the same worker pictured alive. 

‘Don’t look away. The government of Israel killed seven humanitarian workers (a war crime). They knew the coordinates of the workers and used it to kill them,’ Tlaib wrote.

Fox News Digital reached out to Tlaib for further comment.

Israel’s response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack has fractured the Democratic Party, with a growing faction pressuring the Biden administration to limit aid to the Middle Eastern ally.

Tlaib has been one of Biden’s top critics amid the conflict. Along with the accusations against Israel, she also used her Instagram account to criticize the president for sending more weapons and funding to Israel.

She shared a post on Tuesday morning from left-leaning outlet ‘The Intercept’ headlined ‘1 in 5 Wisconsin Democrats said Gaza war will impact their primary vote.’

‘Biden won Wisconsin by 0.63% in 2020. The [Biden campaign] would rather lose to an indicted criminal, twice impeached candidate than say no to genocide,’ Tlaib wrote, referring to former President Trump, the 2024 Republican presidential nominee.

Fox News Digital reached out to the Biden campaign for comment on the remark.

Seven aid workers – citizens from Poland, Australia, the United Kingdom, and a dual U.S.-Canada citizen, as well as a Palestinian – were killed when their vehicle convoy was hit by an airstrike after delivering food in central Gaza, WCK said. The organization said its vehicles were clearly marked with its name and logo, and that it coordinated their movements with the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) beforehand.

WCK is a global nonprofit dedicated to providing fresh meals to people in war zones, natural disasters and other humanitarian crises. The group and its founder, famed chef Jose Andres, both blamed Israel for their deaths.

WCK CEO Erin Gore called the strike ‘unforgivable,’ saying in a statement, ‘I am heartbroken and appalled that we – World Central Kitchen and the world – lost beautiful lives today because of a targeted attack by the IDF.’

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu later put out a statement about an ‘unintentional’ IDF strike.

‘Unfortunately, on the last day, there was a tragic event of our forces unintentionally hitting innocent people in the Gaza Strip,’ Netanyahu said. ‘This happens in war; we are checking thoroughly, we are in contact with the governments, and we will do everything to prevent this from happening again.’

The IDF has said it would conduct a thorough investigation of what happened.

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A group of House Republicans is pushing to rename Washington, D.C.’s, main international airport after former President Trump.

Rep. Guy Reschenthaler, R-Pa., the House GOP’s chief deputy whip, introduced the bill Friday along with six cosponsors. 

‘In my lifetime, our nation has never been greater than under the leadership of President Donald J. Trump,’ Reschenthaler told Fox News Digital. ‘As millions of domestic and international travelers fly through the airport, there is no better symbol of freedom, prosperity and strength than hearing ‘Welcome to Trump International Airport’ as they land on American soil.’

Legislative text obtained by Fox News Digital on Monday showed that, if passed, ‘the Washington Dulles International Airport in Virginia shall after the date of the enactment of this Act be known and designated as the ‘Donald J. Trump International Airport.”

‘Any reference in any law, regulation, map, document, paper, or other record of the United States to the airport referred to in subsection (a) shall be considered to be a reference to the Donald J. Trump International Airport,’ the brief bill said. 

Reschenthaler’s bill is also backed by Reps. Michael Waltz, R-Fla.; Andy Ogles, R-Tenn.; Chuck Fleischmann, R-Tenn.; Paul Gosar, R-Ariz.; Barry Moore, R-Ala.; and Troy Nehls, R-Texas, according to the website Congress.gov.

The bill has little chance of being taken up by the Democrat-controlled Senate, but if passed, it would be the second D.C.-area airport named for a Republican commander in chief after Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia.

‘In 1998, Congress renamed the National Airport in Washington after one of our great presidents, Ronald Reagan. It is only fitting that we would do the same for another one of our greatest presidents, Donald J. Trump, especially as he stands against the onslaught of weaponized government to fight for Americans like us,’ Moore told Fox News Digital.

Gosar similarly said, ‘I can see no more fitting recognition than naming both airports in our nation’s capital after America’s two best presidents: DCA after President Reagan and Dulles after President Trump.’

Dulles is a busy international hub that’s critical for lawmakers and other Washington officials’ travel, particularly for airlines and routes that do not operate out of Reagan, which is smaller than its Loudoun County counterpart.

Dulles was ranked 33rd out of 764 U.S. airports in terms of passenger traffic in 2023, according to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics. With domestic and international travel combined, roughly 25 million passengers went through Dulles last year.

It’s also the fourth-largest U.S. airport in terms of land area, according to the website Air Advisor.

Fox News Digital reached out to the campaign for Trump, the 2024 Republican presidential nominee, for comment.

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Democratic strategist James Carville said Sunday that poll numbers showing the Democratic Party losing support among young minority voters are ‘horrifying’ ahead of November’s presidential election.

Carville, a former campaign strategist for former President Bill Clinton, made the comments on his podcast ‘Carville’s Classroom.’

‘I’ve been very vocal about this,’ Carville said. ‘It’s horrifying our numbers among younger voters, particularly younger Blacks, younger Latinos … younger people of color. Particularly males.’

‘We’re not shedding them, they’re leaving in droves,’ he added.

Last year, a Gallup survey found 66% of Black adults leaned or identified as a Democrat compared to 19% who said they either leaned or identified as a Republican, a 19-point dip from the advantage Democrats held in 2020 and the closest margin in at least 25 years.

The poll also found 47% of Hispanics identified as Democrats while 35% identified as Republican. In 2021, 57% of Hispanics identified as Democrats and 26% described themselves as Republicans. 

Black and Hispanic voters are key Democratic voting blocs, and President Biden has also been losing support from both demographics, as he prepares to take on former President Trump in November.

A USA Today/Suffolk University poll published in January found Biden’s support among Black voters was at 63%, a 24-point drop from the 87% he had in 2020.

The poll also found that Trump had an advantage over Biden among Hispanic voters by a margin of 39% to 34% and voters under the age of 35 by a margin of 37% to 33%.

A New York Times/Siena College poll released last month showed Trump ahead of Biden among Hispanic voters 46% to 40%. The survey also found Trump has the support of 23% of Black voters.

Carville said Democrats must make the argument that the ‘consequences’ of electing Trump to serve a second four-year term will impact young Black and Hispanic Americans for the next 35 years.

‘We’re not going to convince under-30, under-35, ‘Oh, we really built a great country for you,” he said. ‘You’re looking at this job market… I don’t think you’re going to buy that.’

He said Democrats ‘need strong advocacy explaining to these youngsters what exactly they have at stake here.’

‘Forget birth control pills, forget reproductive rights, forget environmental protections, forget anything,’ he added.

This comes after Carville said in a recent interview with The New York Times that ‘preachy females’ are to blame for Biden’s polling numbers.

‘A suspicion of mine is that there are too many preachy females. Don’t drink beer. Don’t watch football. Don’t eat hamburgers. This is not good for you — the message is too feminine,’ Carville said. ‘If you listen to Democratic elites — NPR is my go-to place for that — the whole talk is about how women, and women of color, are going to decide this election. I’m like: ‘Well, 48 percent of the people that vote are males. Do you mind if they have some consideration?”

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Do you know what you are talking about when you opine on Israel’s war of survival? 
 
Give me five minutes with a person’s checkbook,’ the late Billy Graham remarked, ‘and I will tell you where their heart is.’ 
 
That famous dictum is no longer true because…who uses checkbooks? But a modern corollary is now applicable: ‘Show me the podcasts you follow in your feed and actually listen to, and I’ll tell you whether you are genuinely informed about ____.’ 

 
Podcasts have become an alternative to news programs—network, cable or on the radio—and to newspapers. Sports pods came first as fans of specific franchises are ‘super consumers’ of news and analysis of the clubs they follow. My feed is full of Cleveland sports for example: ‘Terry’s Talkin’’ with Terry Pluto and David Campbell of Cleveland.com, along with ‘Orange and Brown Talk’ and ‘Buckeye Talk’ from the same platform with different hosts who cover the Cleveland Browns and The Ohio State University Buckeyes football have been in my podcast feed the longest.  

Also on the feed is the relatively new ‘Kings of the North’ pod, hosted by Doug Lesmaires and Bill Landis, which has forged a concept that ‘northern’ college football deserved its own pod—as opposed to, say, dreaded SEC pods that don’t understand that the best college football is played north of Tennessee. It’s quite entertaining, as well as my other regular sports pods. That’s what the best sports pods are: entertaining and informative.  
 
Of political and general news pods, there are now thousands competing with sports pods. I enjoy ‘Getting Hammered’ with Mary Katharine Ham and Vic Matus because it is funny and topical, and I feel like I am listening in to conversations my adult children might be having. It does cover some news, but mostly it provides a dive into the informed perspectives on the news of a different age cohort.  
 
But if the subject you are interested in is Israel’s war in Gaza, and quite likely the imminent, much expanded battle between the IDF and Hezbollah on the northern border of the Jewish state, you have to be much more selective.  
 
Thus, I have become a daily listener to the Times of Israel’s The Daily Briefing (especially when the platform’s senior analyst Haviv Rettig Gur is a guest) and it’s ‘What Matters Now’ pod which also often features Rettig Gur, who has become something of a must-listen to interpreter of the war for non-Israelis.  

I discovered Rettig Gur on the ‘Call Me Back’ podcast hosted by Dan Senor, a pod on which Senor interviews key observers of the war in Gaza and the likelihood of another front that exploded in intensity in the north. Senor is an American who seems to know pretty much every journalist and many officials in Israel. 
 
Senor’s March 21 interview of Israeli War Cabinet member Ron Dermer was perhaps the first ‘strategic’ pod I have listened to. Dermer quite obviously had many messages to deliver from the War Cabinet to the American public that supports Israel’s war. He picked Senor’s pod because he wanted to speak to that audience specifically. It was a wise choice. Senor is a seasoned interviewer but, in this episode, like almost every other episode, Senor is eliciting information, not dealing out his opinions.  
 
Finally, I’m not Jewish, but I am also not blind to the surge in antisemitism in the United States to truly staggering levels, so I make a habit of listening to every ‘Commentary’ pod that appears as well as relevant ones from The Free Press, the platform pioneered by Bari Weiss which has exploded in popularity as an alternative to legacy media.  
 
The latter is usually a new take with a new voice on most episodes, but the Commentary pod has a recurring format: Editor-in-chief of Commentary Magazine John Podhoretz leads a daily conversation with his Executive Editor Abe Greenwald and two or three of his key contributors—Matt Continetti, Seth Mandel and Christine Rosen—through every aspect of Israel’s war and its impact on Jewish Americans of the antisemitic Krakatoa that went off in the states after 10/7, as well as a good mix of domestic American politics as campaign 2024 heads into its third turn.  

What ‘JPod,’ as Podhoretz is known online and off, does is simply run through the current developments with his gang of very, very smart voices—say, a focus on the abstention of the U.S. on last week’s Security Council Resolution decoupling a ceasefire from release of the hostages or on the views of American Jewry on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The Commentary pod also welcomes guests like Dr. Jonathan Schanzer, Eli Lake or Eliana Johnson. They also welcome—wait for it—the remarkable Rettig Gur now and again.  
 
Finally, I make a point to listen to Donniel Hartman, 66, and Yossi Klein Halevi, 71, on their ‘For Heaven’s Sake’ pod, whenever it appears, because these are two very smart old Israeli friends who are public intellectuals of great reputation in Israel who seem to me to be left and center-left (and both anti-Netanyahu) and thus certain to introduce me to some Israeli thinking that isn’t necessarily going to make it into news reports I ordinarily read. They also represent voices from my age cohort with references throughout to their 50-plus years of Israeli history and politics.  

 
Bottom line, I’d have half as many facts and views of the war if I only listened to two of these four podcasts focused mostly on Israel’s war of survival. If I relied only on American legacy media, I would have a terribly distorted view of the war and would be blind and dumb to vast amounts of crucial data about the war.  
 
Thus, on Friday’s night ‘Special Report’—Gillian Turner sitting in for Bret Baier—the ‘Winners and Losers of the Week’ segment came up, and I rattled off these pods as the ‘winners of the week’ because of their collective coverage of this terrible but necessary war. I recommend all four of them to you because so much of the coverage of the war in Gaza and what seems likely to be a war in Lebanon requires a lot of information and assessment that most reporters and pundits simply don’t have the time to acquire.  

Give me five minutes with your podcast feed, and I’ll know not just your passions, but probably your point of view on politics generally and whether or not you are in a position to even articulate an informed opinion on the war that Israel is waging. Give them all a try. Start, perhaps with Senor’s conversation with Dermer from last week and his latest interview or Rettig Gur which posted early Monday morning in the U.S. 

Hugh Hewitt is one of the country’s leading journalists of the center-right. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996, where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990, and it is today syndicated to hundreds of stations and outlets across the country every Monday through Friday morning. Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and this column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcast, and this column previews the lead story that will drive his radio show today.

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JERUSALEM — Families of U.S. citizens being held hostage by Hamas since its brutal terror attack in southern Israel six months ago expressed frustration this week that mediation talks keep stalling and have failed to bring their loved ones home. Some also said they are disappointed that political interests seem to be a higher priority than saving lives. 

‘We live in a different galaxy, all of us families and every day is a decision to get up and pretend to be a human,’ Rachel Goldberg-Polin, mother of Hersh Goldberg-Polin, 23, who was kidnapped by Hamas from a music festival taking place near the border with Gaza on Oct. 7, told Fox News Digital in an interview. 

The Chicago-born mother of three, who moved to Israel with her husband, Jon, and their children in 2008, said, ‘We run to the ends of the Earth, and we work as hard as we can, and we talk to everyone possible to try to flip the stone that’s going to bring our loved ones home.’

‘We’re in a constant state of trauma, terror, agony, angst, misery, it’s constant. There’s never one second of not feeling trauma,’ said Goldberg-Polin, who last heard from her son minutes before his arm was blown off by terrorists. 

Grisly footage shows him grasping his bloody arm while being loaded into a truck along with several other hostages before being driven into captivity in Gaza. Since then, there have been no signs he is still alive nor any that he is among the dead.

Goldberg-Polin said it was impossible to describe the feeling of being stuck in such ‘ambiguous trauma.’ She also expressed hope that those negotiating for her son’s release ‘would do what is right for the people, even if it isn’t always right for them.’ 

‘I want to pray and be optimistic and hopeful that our leaders will be leaders,’ she said. ‘Being a leader means doing what’s right for the people, even if it isn’t always right for the leaders. It requires a lot of courage and selflessness and tenacity and bravery, and that’s what I wish for the leaders of all these different entities that are trying to lean in.’

Representatives from the U.S., Egypt and Qatar, as well as some other countries, have been locked in negotiations, mediating between Israel and the Iranian-backed Hamas organization since the war in Gaza started last October. Sparked by a mass attack in which thousands of Palestinian terrorists infiltrated Israel’s southern border, the killing spree left more than 1,200 people dead with some 250 others, mostly civilians, taken hostage.

A weeklong cease-fire last November saw Hamas release more than 100 hostages, and in recent weeks those survivors have spoken out about what they endured, including beatings, sexual assault and, in some cases, being held in underground cages. The hostages were denied food, water and adequate medical attention, according to some of those who are now home.

Around 135 hostages remain in captivity, including eight U.S. citizens, with Hamas refusing to allow international relief agencies to visit or attend to them. While three of the eight U.S. hostages have been confirmed dead based on intelligence gathered by the Israeli army, the families of those who may still be alive fear time is rapidly running out to save their loved ones. 

Jonathan Dekel-Chen, whose son, Sagui Dekel-Chen, 35, was kidnapped from his home on Kibbutz Nir Oz, shared with Fox News Digital the despair of not knowing his son’s fate. 

‘There have been ups and downs, mostly downs, in these days, weeks and months, but I try not to get into the emotional roller coaster because then it would simply be impossible to function,’ he said. ‘We just have to get up every day and try to find every means possible to bring closer that day when our loved ones will return.’ 

The Connecticut-born Dekel-Chen said he had been in close contact with the U.S. administration ‘on every level’ since the early days of the war and described the support as ‘extraordinary.’

‘We’ve had steady meetings with the national security adviser, the chief negotiator and with senior people at the CIA,’ he said. ‘They’ve been as transparent as they possibly can be with us about the U.S. position in the negotiations and what it is that they’re trying to do.’

Dekel-Chen said he recently spent two hours at the White House meeting with President Biden. He also said that he has experienced ‘wall-to-wall solidarity’ in Congress, including from those who have been critical of Israel’s actions during the war.

However, Dekel-Chen said that ‘the only way we’ll know if enough is being done is when the 134 people are back in Israel.’

In addition to Hersh Goldberg-Polin and Sagui Dekel-Chen, the other U.S. citizens being held captive in Gaza include 64-year-old Keith Siegel, who was taken hostage with his wife, Aviva, from their home on Kibbutz Kfar Aza – Aviva was released during the November cease-fire; Edan Alexander, 19, an Israeli soldier originally from Tenafly, New Jersey; and Omer Neutra, another soldier, from Long Island, New York; Three other U.S. citizens – Judy Weinstein and her husband, Gad Haggai, and 19-year-old Itay Chen – are believed to have been murdered by Hamas, who are still holding onto their bodies.

Ruby Chen, Itay’s father, said that he believed ‘being a U.S. citizen would provide Itay with additional protection’ and that immediately following the Oct. 7 attacks he organized a demonstration and a press conference to raise awareness of their plight. Not long after that, the families of U.S. citizens were contacted by representatives from the office of the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs, he said. Since then, they have been in constant contact with members of the administration, which has spared no efforts to talk and meet with them.

‘On the Friday [after the attack], we had a call with the president that was scheduled to last 15 minutes, but he stayed on the call for more than an hour, listening to everyone,’ Chen said. ‘It was clear that it was a higher priority for him to do everything possible to get all the hostages out.’

But Chen – who was informed on March 12 that Itay was murdered on Oct. 7 and that his body was taken to Gaza – said he is no longer convinced that the U.S. approach to freeing those being held is effective.

‘We are now six months after and the U.S.’s working assumption has not gotten us to the point where the eight U.S. citizens being held have been released,’ the New York native said, explaining that the U.S. believes Israel will be able to reach a deal to release the U.S. citizens along with the Israeli citizens. 

‘The U.S. administration should be asking itself what the best course of action is – are they still confident that Israel [is] doing everything possible to get U.S. citizens out of harm’s way?’ said Chen, who also received a condolence call from the president. ‘I think the U.S. administration has an obligation both legally and morally to do whatever it can to get U.S. citizens out of danger and back with their families.’  

‘As the hostage families, we want them to come out yesterday,’ Orna Neutra, the mother of soldier Omer Neutra, told Fox News Digital.’

She said that following the initial cease-fire agreement ‘we have been hearing that there needs to be pressure on Hamas for things to happen, but we are now at day 177 and with all the pressure that’s been on Hamas, there have been no more releases.’ 

‘We are very frustrated, and it’s very concerning that there seems to be no end to this war, and we’re also not sure what the incentive is for Hamas to release them if the war continues,’ Neutra said, adding also that because her son is among the IDF soldiers being held, he is unlikely to be released even if a humanitarian cease-fire deal is reached in the near future. 

According to reports, the remaining children, women, the elderly and the injured are being prioritized by negotiating teams, who are continuing to meet this week in Egypt and Qatar. 

‘We feel we are stuck in a situation where politics is playing too much of a role,’ said Ronen Neutra, Omer’s father. ‘There is obviously an election year in the United States and there are all kinds of considerations for the administration.’

In addition, he said, ‘[Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu is fighting to stay in power in a tough situation and needs to make tough decisions on what’s more important.’

The Neutras, along with the parents of other IDF soldiers being held hostage, met last Thursday with the Israeli leader and impressed upon him that getting all the hostages released should be a priority, more than winning the war or political survival.

The Israeli-born parents, who immigrated to the U.S. more than 25 years ago, said their son was born in Manhattan days after al Qaeda’s attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

‘We thought we were living in one of the safest places in the world terroristic-wise,’ Ronen Neutra said. ‘Like the rest of the country, 9/11 hit us by surprise, and little did we know that 22 years later our son will be a victim of the biggest terrorist attack on Israel, and we would spend the next six months being terrorized ourselves.’

The Neutras also said they had received an outpouring of support from the administration and from American politicians on ‘both sides of the aisle.’ They said they hope the topic of hostages in Gaza will remain a nonpartisan issue. 

‘This is a terrible humanitarian situation, and everyone needs to work together to support the president and the administration and put pressure outside,’ Ronen Neutra said. ‘They should do whatever they can to make sure that Netanyahu, the Qataris and Egypt are all aligned. Everyone must work together to bring them home. There is no more time.’

Neutra said he felt it important to remind Americans that some 44 U.S. citizens were killed on Oct. 7, and he asked ‘where is the outrage?’

‘It is a staggering number,’ Neutra said. ‘We don’t think Americans understand it or know it, and we ask ourselves, where’s the outrage is and where is the public?’

Chen said that ‘any patriotic American from Massachusetts to Michigan to Montana to Arizona should ask themselves when was the last time over 40 U.S. citizens were killed by a terror organization and where is justice for the U.S. people?’ 

Frustration is growing among the hostage families, Chen said, calling on Palestinians living in Gaza to also exert pressure to bring the hostages home and end the war.

‘They could go to their elected officials – they voted for Hamas – and demand a solution, like we do,’ he said. ‘They [the Palestinians] claim there is starvation and that there is a significant humanitarian crisis, given that Israelis will not end this war until all the hostages are out, then why don’t they demand that their elected officials get a deal done?’

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A longtime Democratic political operative behind a network of left-leaning media organizations masquerading as ‘independent’ local news outlets has maintained access to the upper echelons of President Biden’s White House.

Tara McGowan, the founder and publisher of Courier Newsroom, has visited the Biden White House nearly 20 times, a Fox News Digital review found.

McGowan, CEO and founder of Courier Newsroom’s parent, Good Information Inc., participated in several one-on-one meetings with top White House aides. For example, McGowan met with Jordan Finkelstein, who was serving as a chief of staff to one of President Biden’s senior advisers, at least six times between October 2022 and October 2023.

Another top aide who was listed on the visitor logs for McGowan’s White House visits was Patrick Stevenson. Stevenson’s LinkedIn page reveals he is the ‘Deputy Assistant to the President and Senior Advisor for Digital Strategy.’ 

Stevenson’s role in helping lead the White House’s digital strategy could raise questions about coordination between McGowan’s network of media outlets and the White House due to Courier Newsroom’s business model revolving around online engagement and messaging on social media.

Two other top White House aides who McGowan met with were Madeline Strasser, who previously served as an adviser to then-White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain, and Nina Srivastava, who also served as an adviser to Klain. The pair of Klain advisers met with McGowan several times, according to the visitor logs between April 2022 and August 2022.

McGowan’s Instagram account also shows a picture of her alongside President Biden and first lady Jill Biden in front of a Christmas tree, but Fox News Digital could not confirm the date or year of the picture.

McGowan, who worked on former President Obama’s re-election campaign and later for Priorities USA Action, the main super PAC that backed Hillary Clinton’s failed 2016 presidential candidacy, launched Good Information Inc., in 2021 to counter ‘fake news’ and disinformation.

As part of its operations, Good Information acquired Courier Newsroom, which McGowan also founded. 

McGowan’s access to Biden’s White House appeared to pay off for her operation when Courier Newsroom landed an exclusive interview with the president late last year.

‘The White House invited COURIER for an exclusive interview with the President backstage after his rally at the Belvidere Stellantis auto plant in Illinois this fall,’ Courier wrote in its year-end report. ‘One of our national social correspondents got to talk with the President about jobs and workers, sharing exclusive video footage with our audiences across TikTok, Instagram, X, and other channels.’

The Courier News interview with Biden appears to have occurred on Nov. 9 and was posted on TikTok on Nov. 13. White House visitor logs show that McGowan’s second of two White House visits with Stevenson, the top digital White House adviser, occurred one day after the interview was posted on TikTok. 

‘The Biden Administration doesn’t get enough credit for how deeply and strategically they have begun to embrace new models of media, journalism, and social influencers to get their message across to audiences that are no longer reached by the traditional press corps,’ the report states.

Courier Newsroom also undertook a seven-figure ad campaign to boost Democratic politicians during the 2020 elections, and some of its news pieces mirrored the politicians’ own press releases, the Washington Free Beacon previously reported.

At the time, Courier Newsroom had digital outlets and staffed them with reporters in battleground states such as Arizona, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin. Last summer, Courier was beefing up its infrastructure ahead of the 2024 elections by launching additional newsrooms in Nevada, Texas and New Hampshire, according to an Axios report.

The move brought the total number of newsrooms to 11 nationwide, with each newsroom having its own website for the state where it is located.

In 2021, Gabby Deutch, who the Washington Post described as ‘the Washington correspondent for NewsGuard, a New York-based nonpartisan organization that reviews news sites to combat misinformation,’ penned an op-ed criticizing Courier Newsroom as a ‘political operation’ and argued it is ‘exploiting the widespread loss of local journalism to create and disseminate something we really don’t need: hyperlocal partisan propaganda.’

The organization, meanwhile, has received millions of dollars in funding from liberal mega-donors. The George Soros-bankrolled Open Society Foundations is one such institution that has provided vast amounts of cash to its operations.

According to a search of its grant database, the Fund for Policy Reform, one of the nonprofits in the Soros network, provided Courier Newsroom with three grants totaling $5 million in 2021 and 2022 to ‘support its non-partisan journalism, which aims to further the common good and general welfare of U.S. communities by providing access to information.’

Open Society Foundations stood by their past financial support of Courier Newsroom, calling it ‘values-driven journalism.’

‘Open Society is proud to be among several funders who support Courier Newsroom, which is responding to the disappearance of so many trusted local news organizations across the United States to provide quality, local, values-driven journalism and to meet readers where they are — online,’ an Open Society Foundations spokesperson told Fox News Digital.

One of the grants was earmarked for supporting ‘journalism on democracy and voting rights issues,’ according to the database. 

LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, another left-wing mega-donor, has also provided Courier Newsroom with significant funding, according to reports.

We’re ‘proud to have restored White House press briefings and to engage with a wide range of media,’ White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates told Fox News Digital, ignoring an inquiry about the nature of the meetings.

McGowan’s Good Information Inc. did not respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment on her access to Biden’s administration and the nature of her White House visits. 

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Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. said Monday that he believes President Biden presents a greater threat to democracy than former President Trump.

Kennedy said during an appearance on CNN’s ‘OutFront’ that Biden is a ‘much worse’ threat to democracy than Trump because the current president has been ‘weaponizing’ federal agencies to censor his political opponents.

‘I can make the argument that President Biden is much worse,’ Kennedy said. ‘And the reason for that is President Biden is the first candidate in history, the first president in history that has used the federal agencies to censor political speech or censor his opponent.’

‘The greatest threat to democracy is not somebody who questions election returns but a President of the United States who will use the power of his office to force the social media companies Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, to open a portal and give access to that portal to the FBI, CIA, the IRS, the NIH, to censor his political critics,’ he added.

Kennedy Jr. initially challenged Biden for the Democratic Party’s presidential nomination before launching a White House bid as an independent in October to take on Biden and Trump in the 2024 election.

The comments come after Biden has made repeated claims that Trump is a threat to democracy over his role in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot, for which the former president has been charged at the federal level. Trump, who has falsely alleged over the past three and a half years that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him due to voter fraud, said in December that Biden is the ‘real threat.’

CNN host Erin Burnett pressed Kennedy on how Trump’s alleged role in attempting to overturn the 2020 election results was not a threat to democracy. Kennedy admitted that the allegations against Trump do represent a threat to democracy, but that Biden’s efforts to stifle speech are still worse.

‘I think that is a threat to democracy if we’re trying to overthrow the election, clearly a threat,’ he said. ‘But the question was ‘Who was a worse threat to democracy?’ And what I would say is I, you know, I’m not going to answer that question and argue that President Biden is because the First Amendment, Erin, is the most important.’

When asked to clarify if he could make an argument that Biden is worse for U.S. democracy than Trump, Kennedy responded, ‘Absolutely.’

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Iran is not likely to respond directly against the Jewish state but rather use its proxies to do the job, after a top commander of its Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was killed in an apparent Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy in Damascus.

‘Given the target and location of the strike – at a building adjacent to the consulate — I expect the Iranians to respond,’ Bill Roggio, managing editor of Long War Journal, told Fox News Digital.

‘It is difficult to say how the Iranians respond,’ Roggio said. ‘The Iranians may try to target Israelis overseas, and may also leverage its militias – Hezbollah, the Houthis, and the Iraqi and Syria militias, to strike at targets within Israel.’

Roggio’s comments come after Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a senior IRGC commander, was reportedly killed Monday in an air strike on the Iranian consulate in the Syrian capital, according to a report from Reuters.

Iran’s consulate was flattened in the strike, according to the report, which noted that Syrian and Iranian media had blamed the carnage on an Israeli air strike.

Israel declined to comment on the apparent strike, Reuters reported, with an Israeli military spokesperson telling the outlet that it does ‘not comment on reports in foreign media.’ The strike, according to Iranian state television, also killed several Iranian diplomats.

Israel has stepped up strikes in Syria and on Iranian-backed targets since the Hamas’ attack on Israel in October, Reuters noted, hitting both Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah terror groups as well as IRGC targets.

Yigal Carmon, a former adviser to two Israeli prime ministers on countering terrorism and founder and president of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), told Fox News Digital that, ‘Khamenei’s policies over the years reflect cowardice. The Iranian pattern of reaction is such that he escalates when he feels that the other side is afraid of him, and backs down when the other side shows deterrence.’

He continued, ‘In the attack on an official Iranian government target in Damascus, Israel escalated against Iran, telling Iran that Israel will not continue with the proxy game so commonly played by Iran. The Israeli escalation was to serve as a warning: we are ready for battle with you, Iran, directly, at this time, even though we are at war in both Gaza and Lebanon.’

Carmon’s said his assessment is that, ‘Khamenei will not react to the Israeli escalation by escalating against an Israeli target BY IRAN ITSELF. Rather, he will continue with the proxy game, targeting Israel by the Houthis, Hezbollah and possibly by terrorists in the West. He does not need and is not ready for an all-out war with Israel at this time.’

Another expert on the region, Casey Babb, a Fellow with the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, and a Professor at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs in Ottawa, told Fox News Digital that the latest strike is an example of the Israeli military’s significant reach.

‘It signals to Israel’s enemies — including Hamas, Hezbollah, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Iran, and other hostile actors — that the reach of Israel is immeasurable. No one is safe,’ Babb said. 

Babb said that the strike will deal Iran a ‘serious organizational blow’ and disrupt the IRGC’s ability to ‘mobilize, plan, and carry out effective attacks’ while also destabilizing ‘the psyche of Iranian leadership and their proxies.’

‘It makes them feel vulnerable, it makes them feel inferior, and crucially, it makes them question themselves,’ Babb said. ‘At the end of the day – all of these barbarians know their death warrants have been issued. This latest killing is just a reminder of that.’

Responding to the attack during a news conference, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said the U.S. did not have confirmation of the target or the responsible party, but noted the department’s concern that the reported strike could be seen as ‘escalatory’ and potential ’cause an increase in conflict in the region.’

Meanwhile, Fox News’ Trey Yingst reported Monday that Iran has vowed a ‘swift, direct, and harsh’ response to the apparent Israeli attack.

However, Babb argued that Iran is unlikely to mount any sort of ‘significant’ response.

‘Hezbollah, Iran, and other potential entities that could respond don’t want a full scale war with Israel,’ Babb said. ‘They know they’d be in ruins relatively fast – so they’ll likely respond in some calibrated way – but not enough to trigger a full on military confrontation.’

Joe Truzman a senior research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and an expert on Iran and its proxies, told Fox News Digital that while Iran has generally steered clear of a direct conflict with Israel and used its proxies to carry out attacks, ‘The attack in Damascus specifically targeted high-ranking IRGC officers, as well as the Iranian consulate. As a result, Iran is likely to respond more forcefully to this incident compared to past attacks on its officers in Syria, he said. 

‘This possible shift in tactics suggests that the conflict between Iran and Israel may be entering a new and potentially more dangerous phase,’ he warned.

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Iran is likely to respond and target Israelis after a top commander of its Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) was killed in an apparent Israeli airstrike on the Iranian embassy in Damascus.

‘Given the target and location of the strike – at a building adjacent to the consulate — I expect the Iranians to respond,’ Bill Roggio, managing editor of Long War Journal, told Fox News Digital.

Roggio’s comments come after Mohammad Reza Zahedi, a senior IRGC commander, was reportedly killed Monday in an air strike on the Iranian consulate in the Syrian capital, according to a report from Reuters.

Iran’s consulate was flattened in the strike, according to the report, which noted that Syrian and Iranian media had blamed the carnage on an Israeli air strike.

Israel declined to comment on the apparent strike, Reuters reported, with an Israeli military spokesperson telling the outlet that it does ‘not comment on reports in foreign media.’

But the strike, which Iranian state television reported also killed several Iranian diplomats, is likely to draw some sort of response, Roggio said.

‘It is difficult to say how the Iranians respond,’ Roggio said. ‘The Iranians may try to target Israelis overseas, and may also leverage its militias – Hezbollah, the Houthis, and the Iraqi and Syria militias, to strike at targets within Israel.’

Israel has stepped up strikes in Syria and on Iranian-backed targets since the Hamas’ attack on Israel in October, Reuters noted, hitting both Lebanon’s Iranian-backed Hezbollah terror groups as well as IRGC targets.

Yigal Carmon, a former adviser to two Israeli prime ministers on countering terrorism and founder and president of the Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), told Fox News Digital that, ‘Khamenei’s policies over the years reflect cowardice. The Iranian pattern of reaction is such that he escalates when he feels that the other side is afraid of him, and backs down when the other side shows deterrence.’

He continued, ‘In the attack on an official Iranian government target in Damascus, Israel escalated against Iran, telling Iran that Israel will not continue with the proxy game so commonly played by Iran. The Israeli escalation was to serve as a warning: we are ready for battle with you, Iran, directly, at this time, even though we are at war in both Gaza and Lebanon.’

Carmon’s said his assessment is that, ‘Khamenei will not react to the Israeli escalation by escalating against an Israeli target BY IRAN ITSELF. Rather, he will continue with the proxy game, targeting Israel by the Houthis, Hezbollah and possibly by terrorists in the West. He does not need and is not ready for an all-out war with Israel at this time.’

Another expert on the region, Casey Babb, a Fellow with the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv, and a Professor at the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs in Ottawa, told Fox News Digital that the latest strike is an example of the Israeli military’s significant reach.

‘It signals to Israel’s enemies — including Hamas, Hezbollah, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad, Iran, and other hostile actors — that the reach of Israel is immeasurable. No one is safe,’ Babb said. 

Babb said that the strike will deal Iran a ‘serious organizational blow’ and disrupt the IRGC’s ability to ‘mobilize, plan, and carry out effective attacks’ while also destabilizing ‘the psyche of Iranian leadership and their proxies.’

‘It makes them feel vulnerable, it makes them feel inferior, and crucially, it makes them question themselves,’ Babb said. ‘At the end of the day – all of these barbarians know their death warrants have been issued. This latest killing is just a reminder of that.’

Responding to the attack during a news conference, State Department spokesperson Matt Miller said the U.S. did not have confirmation of the target or the responsible party, but noted the department’s concern that the reported strike could be seen as ‘escalatory’ and potential ’cause an increase in conflict in the region.’

Meanwhile, Fox News’ Trey Yingst reported Monday that Iran has vowed a ‘swift, direct, and harsh’ response to the apparent Israeli attack.

However, Babb argued that Iran is unlikely to mount any sort of ‘significant’ response.

‘Hezbollah, Iran, and other potential entities that could respond don’t want a full scale war with Israel,’ Babb said. ‘They know they’d be in ruins relatively fast – so they’ll likely respond in some calibrated way – but not enough to trigger a full on military confrontation.’

Joe Truzman a senior research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and an expert on Iran and its proxies, told Fox News Digital that while Iran has generally steered clear of a direct conflict with Israel and used its proxies to carry out attacks, ‘The attack in Damascus specifically targeted high-ranking IRGC officers, as well as the Iranian consulate. As a result, Iran is likely to respond more forcefully to this incident compared to past attacks on its officers in Syria, he said. 

‘This possible shift in tactics suggests that the conflict between Iran and Israel may be entering a new and potentially more dangerous phase,’ he warned.

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