5 stories we’re watching in 2025
1) President Trump, again
Donald Trump’s return to power opens the door to a whole host of questions: How will Jewish advocacy groups like HIAS and leaders of synagogues that have declared themselves sanctuaries for immigrants respond to mass deportation efforts?
Will the conservative policy blueprint Project 2025 give further prominence to Christian nationalism and erode the historic separation of church and state?
How will former Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Baptist minister and the first non-Jew named as U.S. ambassador to Israel since 2011, shape the job?
Who will Trump tap to replace Ambassador Deborah Lipstadt as his antisemitism envoy? (Here’s a guide to his Jewish advisers and pro-Israel appointees so far.)
2) The hostages
Today marks the 454th day in captivity for the 101 people kidnapped on Oct. 7 and still in captivity (at least a third are believed dead). Talk of a hostage release coinciding with Hanukkah came and went (barring a late-holiday miracle today). Now all eyes are on Jan. 2o, Inauguration Day.
Trump has threatened Hamas that there will be “all hell to pay” if the captives aren’t released before he takes office. Were it to happen, such a deal would give a political victory to both Biden and Trump.
3) Antisemitism and the war
U.S. Jews continue to be divided over Israel’s prosecution of the war in Gaza now in its second year and having expanded regionally, and on how to fight antisemitism reverberating around the world. The new Trump administration has signaled its plans to crack down on pro-Palestinian demonstrators on college campuses, though there have been far fewer this fall than last spring.
Scores of universities are facing lawsuits or Department of Education complaints alleging discrimination and a climate of hostility for Jewish students.
4) New York City mayoral race
The city, home to the largest concentration of Jews outside Israel, is overwhelmingly Democratic, so the main contest is the June primary. Seven politicians have already announced challenges to Mayor Eric Adams and more are expected to jump in. Adams won in 2021 with the strong backing of Orthodox leaders, and he has been outspoken about a rise in antisemitism in the city.
But Adams faces an April trial on corruption charges, and mayoral wannabes including Comptroller Brad Lander and former Comptroller Scott Stringer, who are both Jewish, will also court Jewish voters.
5) The Oscars
Two Holocaust films — The Brutalist and A Real Pain — are contenders for Academy Awards. A Holocaust film has not won the top prize since Schindler’s List, which was 1994’s Best Picture, and Life is Beautiful, which claimed Best Foreign Language Film and Best Actor for Roberto Benigni in 1997.
The Golden Globes, a reliable precursor to Oscar nominations, are this Sunday. The Brutalist is up for best drama and A Real Pain for best comedy.
Related: My colleague PJ Grisar offers 25 “fairly feasible” pop culture predictions for 2025. |