Rowling hits back at Emma Watson’s comments, calls her ‘ignorant’

By Apoorva Rastogi | Sep 30, 2025, 11:17 AM

**JK Rowling Responds to Emma Watson’s Comments on Their Complicated Relationship**

Author J.K. Rowling has responded to recent comments made by Harry Potter star Emma Watson regarding their complicated relationship. In a lengthy and scathing post on X (formerly Twitter), Rowling criticized Watson for being “ignorant of how ignorant she is” and called out her privilege.

The ongoing feud between Rowling and several Harry Potter actors has been fueled by the author’s controversial anti-transgender comments and allegations of transphobia. In contrast, Watson and Daniel Radcliffe have publicly supported the transgender community.

### “Emma Has So Little Experience of Real Life”

Rowling began her post by stating,
> “I’m not owed eternal agreement from any actor who once played a character I created. The idea is as ludicrous as me checking with the boss I had when I was 21 for what opinions I should hold these days.”

She added,
> “Like other people who’ve never experienced adult life uncushioned by wealth and fame, Emma has so little experience of real life she’s ignorant of how ignorant she is.”

### Rowling’s Perspective on Watson and Radcliffe

Rowling further commented,
> “Emma Watson and her co-stars have every right to embrace gender identity ideology. Such beliefs are legally protected, and I wouldn’t want to see any of them threatened with loss of work, or violence, or death because of them.”

However, Rowling also wrote,
> “Emma and Dan in particular have both made it clear over the last few years that they think our former professional association gives them a particular right, nay, obligation, to critique me and my views in public.”

### Addressing the 2022 BAFTA Moment

Rowling referenced a moment from Watson’s viral 2022 BAFTA speech, during which Watson said she was there for “all of the witches,” a statement widely perceived as showing support for the trans community.

Rowling revealed,
> “[After the event], Emma asked someone to pass a note, which [said] ‘I’m so sorry for what you’re going through.’ Emma had just publicly poured more petrol on the flames, yet thought a one-line expression of concern would reassure me of her fundamental sympathy.”

### Watson Speaks Out on Their Relationship

Rowling’s post followed Watson’s recent discussion of their relationship during an episode of Jay Shetty’s *On Purpose* podcast. Watson said,
> “I guess where I’ve landed it, it’s not so much what we say or what we believe, it’s how we say it. I just see this world right now where we seem to be giving permission to this throwing out of people, or that people are disposable. I will always think that’s wrong.”

### Watson and Radcliffe’s Support for the Transgender Community

Emma Watson has consistently shown her support for transgender rights. In 2020, she tweeted,
> “Trans people are who they say they are and deserve to live their lives without being constantly questioned or told they aren’t who they say they are.”

Similarly, Daniel Radcliffe has spoken out,
> “Transgender women are women. Any statement to the contrary erases the identity and dignity of transgender people and goes against all advice given by professional health care associations who have far more expertise on this subject matter than either Jo [Rowling] or I.”

The tension between Rowling and the Harry Potter cast highlights the ongoing cultural debate surrounding transgender rights and freedom of expression. As this story develops, both sides continue to receive strong support from their respective communities.
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/news/entertainment/jk-rowling-responds-to-emma-watson/story

Three presidential candidates face off in first TV debate in race for Áras

The first televised debate of the presidential campaign was shown on Virgin Media One on Monday night. Hosted by Kieran Cuddihy, the debate featured the three candidates: Independent Catherine Connolly, Fine Gael’s Heather Humphreys, and Fianna Fáil’s Jim Gavin.

The 60-minute programme began with opening statements from the candidates. This was followed by questions on neutrality before moving on to the issue of Irish flags being erected in certain communities, which led to a broader debate about immigration.

The topic raised the first real clash concerning direct provision and asylum seekers. Gavin welcomed immigration but emphasized the need for a robust yet fair immigration system. Connolly was strongly critical of the direct provision process and, when asked about those who are not asylum seekers or whose claims have been rejected, she stated: “We are talking about human beings and about a conflation of issues.”

The debate then moved on to safety on the streets of Dublin and other towns. Humphreys asserted that there are more gardaí on the streets, while Connolly countered that there is a lack of Garda presence on the ground, particularly community gardaí.

There were also strong exchanges on the situation in Gaza between Connolly and Gavin before the discussion turned to the challenging topic of housing. Connolly was adamant that the Government has failed miserably in this area. Humphreys defended the Government’s performance to date, acknowledging that ambitious goals were not achieved but noting that the solution is very complex.

A potential United Ireland was also discussed, with all three candidates outlining their experiences with communities in the North. Humphreys spoke of her experience as a “proud Ulsterwoman and Republican.”

### Opening Statements

In the initial addresses, Catherine Connolly opened proceedings, saying:

> “As President and working together, we can shape a new United Republic, where everyone is valued, where diversity is cherished, where sustainable solutions are urgently implemented and where a home is a fundamental human right.

> A country where we raise our voice for the peaceful resolution to conflicts and war, drawing on our history of colonization, of famine and our lived experience of the successful peace process in the North.”

Heather Humphreys said:

> “I want to bring my life experience to the role of President. I worked for many years as a Credit Union manager; where I got to know people; and the challenges they faced. It was a great apprenticeship for public life.

> I was honoured to serve in Cabinet for over a decade. I led the 1916 Commemorations. I supported businesses through the pandemic; and I worked hard to ensure children across our country receive a Hot School meal.

> I’m a daughter, a mother and a grandmother. All my life I have seen the quiet strength of women.

> In my own family, in my community and right across this country, women have been the ones holding things together. I can’t promise perfection, but I will promise honesty, compassion and service.”

Jim Gavin said:

> “Over the last four decades I’ve served my country and its values in many different roles. From working in our most disadvantaged communities to leading peacekeepers in Africa, I’ve always worked to serve others.

> I’ve built teams which show how much we can achieve when we listen and when we respect each other. There’s no problem we cannot overcome when we work together.

> At a time of growing division, my commitment to you is that I will be a President for every section of society. A voice for all.”

### Campaign Activity and Upcoming Debates

Earlier today, Humphreys and Gavin were canvassing in Dublin, while it is understood that Connolly was focusing on her debate preparation.

Further presidential debates are planned to be broadcast on Prime Time and The Week in Politics.

The election takes place on Friday, October 24th, with counting beginning the following day.
https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/three-presidential-candidates-face-off-in-first-tv-debate-in-race-for-aras-1812756.html

Optus instructed to find ‘external party’ to review systems after triple-0 outages

Communications Minister Calls for Independent Review of Optus After Fatal Triple-0 Outages

Communications Minister Anika Wells has instructed Optus to bring in an “independent and external party” as part of efforts to prevent another fatal triple-0 outage. However, no specific details have been provided regarding what this independent review will entail.

The minister met with the heads of Optus and its Singaporean parent company, Singtel, in Sydney on Tuesday morning, nearly two weeks after a 13-hour outage on September 18 was linked to multiple deaths. During the outage, hundreds of people—primarily in South Australia, Western Australia, and the Northern Territory—were unable to reach emergency services when dialing triple-0.

Following the highly anticipated talks, Ms. Wells stated that she had urged the embattled telco to “find a way” to allow an external party to review their systems. She emphasized the importance of Australians gaining confidence from an external investigation and advice, rather than hearing only from Optus that the issues will be resolved.

Shortly after the minister’s media address, Optus chair John Arthur told reporters the company was committed to working with the government “to do whatever needs to be done,” but he was unable to provide specific details about the independent review. “We are always welcome to external perspectives and external views, and that remains the case here,” he said.

Over the weekend following the initial outage, a second failure left thousands of customers in the New South Wales town of Dapto unable to make emergency calls. Ms. Wells highlighted that having two outages “in short succession” has caused a “very serious lack of confidence” in Optus’s ability to deliver reliable triple-0 services.

She further revealed that she sought assurances from Optus chief executive Stephen Rue and Singtel’s chief Yuen Kuan Moon that corrective action would be taken. “No-one is shying away from the fact that Optus has not complied with their obligations to the Australian people and that is what needs to be fixed here,” Ms. Wells said. “I think Optus accepts that, that this is a compliance issue on their part.”

When asked whether Australians could be assured such incidents would not happen again now that the issue had been identified, Ms. Wells responded, “That’s a question that you should put to Optus, immediately.”

John Arthur reiterated that the cause of the initial outage was “process-related” and due to human error, rather than issues with money or investment. He added, “And in due course we will be talking about the extent of Singtel’s investment in Australia, which goes beyond Optus.”

### Optus Leadership and Accountability

Amid growing pressure on Optus to demonstrate its reliability, Singtel chief Yuen Kuan Moon was asked multiple times whether he fully supported Optus CEO Stephen Rue. Mr. Yuen stated that Mr. Rue was brought in almost a year ago specifically “to address issues” within Optus. “It is very early days, it takes time to transform a company,” he commented. “An initial investigation of the September 18 incident found that it was due to a people issue and it takes time to transform and change the people.”

Mr. Yuen also issued an apology to the friends and family of those whose deaths have been linked to the outage.

### Context and Ongoing Investigations

The recent triple-0 outages come just two years after a major Optus failure left thousands unable to call emergency services. In response, Optus was fined more than $12 million, and a comprehensive review was commissioned, resulting in numerous recommendations.

Australia’s communications watchdog has now launched an investigation into the September 18 incident, aiming to understand what went wrong and prevent such failures in the future.

*Optus chief Stephen Rue and Singtel CEO Yuen Kuan Moon have been contacted for further comment.*
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09-30/optus-anika-wells-meet-about-triple-0-outrages/105833276

Monday Morning: (September 28, 2025): Articles You May Have Missed This Past Weekend

**Details By Native News Online Staff | September 29, 2025**

### Walks On at 66: Ernie Stevens, Jr.

Ernie Stevens, Jr., a tribal citizen of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and the longtime chairman of the Indian Gaming Association, walked on Friday at the age of 66.

Jason Giles, executive director of the Indian Gaming Association, released a brief statement on Friday evening:

> “Our Indian Gaming Association board and staff are stunned and saddened by Chairman Stevens’ passing. Out of respect for his wife Cheryl, his lovely family, and the Oneida Nation, we will issue a full tribute at the appropriate time. Please send your prayers to the Stevens family.”

For more details, read the article: [Tributes for Indian Gaming Association Chairman Ernie Stevens, Jr.](#)

### Tributes for Indian Gaming Association Chairman Ernie Stevens, Jr.

Ernie Stevens, Jr., who was reelected to his 13th term as chairman at the organization’s annual convention in San Diego in April 2025, passed away suddenly on Friday, September 26, 2025.

Several tributes have been shared in his honor, celebrating his impactful leadership and dedication to tribal gaming and Native communities.

### Deb Haaland on Tribal Cultural Expression and Support

Deb Haaland, the first and only California Native American elected to the Legislature since statehood, recently addressed important topics including tribal cultural expression, ancestral repatriation, and intertribal support.

Read more about her work and insights: [Link to article](#)

### NCAI Statement: “Wounded Knee Was Not a Battle”

On Friday, the National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) issued a powerful statement clarifying that the Wounded Knee event was not a battle, but rather the deliberate mass killing of 350 Lakota people.

### D.C. Briefs and Oral History Project Update

– **US Presidents in Their Own Words Concerning American Indians**

– **Oral History Project Announces 14th Stop in Portland, Oregon**

The Native American Biographical Society (NABS) continues to gather crucial stories from across Indian Country.

### Native News Weekly (September 28, 2025): D.C. Briefs

Stay informed with the latest updates from Washington, D.C., covering a range of topics affecting Native communities.

*For more articles and updates, visit* Native News Online.
https://nativenewsonline.net/currents/monday-morning-september-28-2025-articles-you-may-have-missed-this-past-weekend

Talks break off between B.C. government and its public service union

**Contract Talks Between BC Government and Public Service Union Break Down**

VICTORIA – Contract negotiations between the British Columbia government and the union representing public service workers in the province have broken off shortly after they began.

Paul Finch, president of the BC General Employees Union, says government negotiators arrived three hours late and offered no material improvement over previous contract proposals. Finch expressed strong dissatisfaction, stating that the union will escalate its job action sharply after the government showed disrespect by presenting an offer that was little changed.

The talks had resumed today following four weeks of ongoing job action. Despite the negotiations, picket lines remain active at various locations, including about a third of provincial liquor stores, liquor and cannabis distribution warehouses, and government offices across the province.

Currently, the union reports that around 15,000 of its 34,000 members involved in the contract are participating in some form of job action. These actions range from an overtime ban to active picketing.

The union is seeking wage increases totaling 8.25 percent over two years. Meanwhile, the government has stated it is aiming to reach a fair deal for both taxpayers and public workers.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published on September 29, 2025.
https://www.winnipegfreepress.com/canada/2025/09/29/cp-newsalert-talks-break-off-between-b-c-government-and-public-service-union

Electronic Arts sold for whopping $55B, second-largest gaming acquisition ever

**Electronic Arts Acquired in Historic $55 Billion Leveraged Buyout**

*By Akash Pandey | Sep 30, 2025, 01:24 AM*

Electronic Arts (EA), the renowned video game developer behind popular titles such as Madden NFL, Battlefield, and The Sims, is set to be acquired for an astounding $55 billion. This deal is poised to become the largest leveraged buyout in history, with a significant portion of the acquisition financed through debt.

### The Consortium Behind the Acquisition

The group of buyers includes Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, Public Investment Fund (PIF), private equity firm Silver Lake, and Affinity Partners—led by Jared Kushner, son-in-law of former US President Donald Trump.

### Deal Details: EA Going Private

If the acquisition proceeds as expected, EA’s 36-year tenure as a publicly traded company will come to an end. The game publisher will no longer be listed on the stock exchange.

The purchase price represents a substantial 25% premium over EA’s current market value, with shareholders receiving $210 per share.

EA’s CEO, Andrew Wilson, who has been at the helm since 2013, will retain his position following the acquisition. Additionally, the company’s headquarters will remain in Redwood City, California.

### Industry Context: Second Largest Gaming Acquisition in History

This acquisition will become the second-largest gaming purchase ever, trailing only Microsoft’s $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard, the publisher of Call of Duty.

Microsoft’s deal faced intense regulatory scrutiny worldwide, with UK authorities warning that it might undermine competition. Approval was eventually granted only after Microsoft agreed to transfer cloud distribution rights for Activision’s console and PC titles to Ubisoft, the developer behind Assassin’s Creed.

### Market Influence: EA’s Role and Saudi Arabia’s Gaming Investments

EA has been a dominant force in the gaming industry for over four decades, producing some of the most successful game franchises in history. Its football game series alone has sold 325 million copies since its debut in 1993.

For Saudi Arabia, this acquisition represents a significant milestone in its broader efforts to expand its footprint in the gaming sector. The kingdom has previously invested in gaming companies like Niantic and has hosted major esports tournaments to bolster its presence.

### Industry Impact: Concerns Over Debt and Workforce

The buyers are expected to contribute $36 billion in equity, with the remaining amount financed through loans, primarily provided by JPMorgan Chase. Industry experts have expressed concern that the deal could saddle EA with approximately $20 billion in debt.

There are also worries about potential job cuts as private investors may push for increased cash flow to service this hefty debt. EA recently reduced its workforce by about 5% in 2024, followed by several hundred layoffs earlier this year.

### What’s Next? Timeline and Outlook

The deal is anticipated to close in the first quarter of 2027, pending approval from EA shareholders.

Going private will grant EA the flexibility to restructure without the pressures and scrutiny that come with being publicly traded, where companies often focus on short-term quarterly results.

Despite its loyal fanbase, EA’s annual revenue has remained relatively flat over the last three fiscal years, fluctuating between $7.4 billion and $7.6 billion.

This acquisition marks a transformative chapter for EA and reflects the evolving landscape of the gaming industry and investment trends globally.
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/news/business/video-game-maker-electronic-arts-acquired-for-55b/story

‘Cannot allow politics to thwart the plan,’ Israeli officials applaud Trump’s Gaza peace plan

‘Cannot Allow Politics to Thwart the Plan,’ Israeli Officials Applaud Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan

Herzog emphasized that Hamas must also agree to the plan in order to “allow a future of hope for the peoples of the region.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump met at the White House on September 29, 2025, to discuss the Gaza peace plan.

Photo credit: Avi Ohayon/GPO

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-869022

Is New Jersey Now a Swing State?

Mikie Sherrill is not prone to hyperbole. The Democratic nominee for governor of New Jersey is measured and mainstream—even milquetoast, in the words of one progressive activist. But when I asked Sherrill what message a victory for her this November would send nationally, she made a rather bold declaration.

“As New Jersey goes, so goes the nation,” she told me.

This is a stretch. But maybe not by all that much.

New Jersey is no one’s idea of a swing state; it hasn’t voted Republican for president in nearly four decades, and it last elected a GOP senator during the Nixon administration. But the Garden State has been moving rightward these past few years—Donald Trump came within six points of winning its electoral votes last year—and the governor’s office has historically toggled between the parties.

This fall’s election holds outsize importance for Democrats, who want both to keep a Trump ally out of a key state office and to give their base some hope heading into the 2026 midterm elections. A win, Sherrill said, would represent the party’s shot across the bow against Trump’s second term.

The off-year governor’s races in New Jersey and Virginia are closely scrutinized for signs of voter backlash to whichever party controls Washington. Usually Virginia, until recently a presidential battleground, provides the best clues about the national mood. This year, however, operatives in both parties believe that New Jersey might be the closer race and the more accurate barometer of how voters are reacting to Trump’s return tour in the White House.

In a shift from previous elections, national Democrats have spent far more money trying to hold the governorship of New Jersey than they have in the Virginia governor’s race. They’ve placed their hopes in Sherrill, a 53-year-old former Navy helicopter pilot and federal prosecutor, who in 2018 captured a House seat long held by Republicans. In June, she won a crowded party primary by defeating candidates to her left and to her right.

Sherrill is now facing the former Republican state legislator Jack Ciattarelli, a self-proclaimed Jersey guy running a loose and energetic campaign built around lowering property taxes, combatting crime, and making a crowd-pleasing appeal to bring plastic bags back to grocery stores. He has run for governor twice before and came within three points of upsetting the heavily favored Democratic incumbent Phil Murphy’s reelection bid in 2021.

Although Sherrill has leaned on her military service, Ciattarelli has mocked her as a predictable and occasionally ham-fisted Democrat; one of his most frequently aired ads shows her fumbling the answer to a seemingly straightforward question about what her first piece of legislation would be.

Sherrill and I spoke shortly after she addressed some 200 mostly nonwhite supporters at a restaurant in Newark, in an area where she wants to run up Democratic margins that have shrunk in recent elections as some Black and Hispanic voters either stayed home or voted Republican. The crowd was filled with local party officials and volunteers who were about to spend the afternoon knocking on doors for Sherrill and the rest of the Democratic ticket.

Nearly everyone I spoke with, however, said they had friends or neighbors who cast their ballot for Trump last year. “Some minorities believe they were taken for granted by Democrats,” Carlos Gonzalez, an at-large member of Newark’s city council, told me. “Trump won their votes by promising to lower their cost of living,” he said, “but the president hasn’t delivered. I am certain that they are going to come back to the Democratic Party because they feel that they were cheated.”

Sherrill was one of the only speakers who did not switch between English and Spanish, but in either language, the themes were the same: affordability and Trump.

“We have an out-of-control president who’s attacking the people we care about, and he’s attacking the economy of our state,” Sherrill said, presenting herself as a bulwark against threats to New Jersey from the Trump administration. She painted Ciattarelli, who secured the president’s endorsement in the GOP primary, as a Trump lackey. Her local surrogates made the same connection in more colorful terms.

“He is going to support the agenda of the orange man, and we don’t want the orange man to control the politics of New Jersey,” Gonzalez told them, and the audience cheered.

Ciattarelli’s actual history with Trump is more complicated than Democrats like to let on. A decade ago, while supporting then-Governor Chris Christie’s presidential bid, Ciattarelli called Trump a charlatan who was not fit to be president of the United States. He did not seek Trump’s endorsement during either of his first two runs for governor—a snub the president remembered when Ciattarelli finally sought Trump’s support earlier this year to fend off a more MAGA-friendly GOP competitor.

On the stump, Ciattarelli is neither obsequious nor critical toward the president. Instead, he plays Sherrill’s frequent criticism of Trump for laughs. He tells audiences that if they took a drink every time the Democrat blamed something on the president, they’d be “drunk off their ass.”

At a packed bar in Fair Lawn, a Democratic-leaning suburb about 20 miles northwest of New York City, Ciattarelli joked: “On your way home tonight, if you get a flat tire, she’s going to blame President Trump.” The line went over well with a crowd that, judging by its large number of MAGA hats and Trump shirts, would have been fine with more effusive praise of the president.

Several people cited Ciattarelli’s better-than-expected showing in 2021 and Trump’s relatively narrow loss in the state last year as reasons for optimism, as they did with the strong turnout for a Monday-evening campaign rally. Well over 100 people stood shoulder to shoulder to hear Ciattarelli deliver a brief speech.

“This is the best chance we’re going to have to turn New Jersey red,” Mike Messina, a 60-year-old retired police officer, told me.

Ciattarelli is a 63-year-old accountant with a deep tan that makes him look like he’s just come from the golf course or the beach. He’s had more freedom to barnstorm the state than Sherrill, whose day job as a House Democrat in the closely divided Congress has occasionally kept her off the campaign trail.

Some of Ciattarelli’s biggest applause lines—keeping wind farms off our Jersey Shore and bringing plastic bags back to the grocery stores—sit at the very edge of the culture wars.

“I could say I’m going to lower taxes, and I get a nice round of applause,” he observed in Fair Lawn. “I say I’m bringing back the plastic bags, and it brings down the house.”

On the topic of Trump, he’s a bit more careful and conventional. When I asked him after the event whether he’d like the president to campaign for him, Ciattarelli replied:

“I appreciate the president’s willingness to do whatever we think he can do to help us win this election, but at the end of the day, the candidate has to win the election.”

He predicted that the Democrats would bring in the party’s biggest stars, including former President Barack Obama, to help Sherrill in the campaign’s closing weeks.

“I’m going to bring in Jack Ciattarelli.”

Trump, himself a New Jersey property owner with a golf club in Bedminster, is keeping a close watch. A Quinnipiac University poll in mid-September showed Sherrill leading Ciattarelli by nine points. But when an Emerson College survey had the race tied last week, Trump seized on the finding to tout Ciattarelli and attack Sherrill.

Later that same day, the Sherrill campaign accused Trump’s administration of aiding Ciattarelli in a far more nefarious way: by releasing Sherrill’s full military records to an ally of the Republican in order to plant a negative story about her.

CBS News discovered the breach while investigating claims pushed by Republicans that Sherrill was barred from walking in her 1994 Naval Academy commencement because she had been implicated in a cheating scandal that involved more than 130 students. (Sherrill has said that she was punished for not reporting on her classmates.)

A branch of the National Archives acknowledged that a technician released too many of her records, including documents that contained her Social Security number and other sensitive information. Sherrill’s campaign claimed that the disclosure violated federal law.

“This is an illegal and dangerous weaponization of the federal government,” Sherrill wrote on X.

Republicans and Democrats can each draw hope from history. The New Jersey governor’s race typically swings away from whichever party won the presidency in the year before—a trend that would favor Sherrill. (Christie won the governorship during Obama’s first year in the White House, and Murphy grabbed it back for Democrats after Trump’s victory in 2016.)

Ciattarelli is banking on voters’ tendency to get tired of the Democrats holding power in Trenton, the state capital: “For more than half a century, neither party has won three governor’s races in a row.”

Sherrill and Ciattarelli both see an electorate that’s frustrated with the status quo and rising prices—particularly a spike in electricity bills. Sherrill has vowed to declare a state of emergency to freeze utility rates on her first day in office if she wins.

Ciattarelli is trying to localize the race, calling Sherrill “Murphy 2.0” and, though she has never served in state government, accusing her of backing policies that have contributed to high energy costs and property taxes.

“It’s a smart strategy,” Mike DuHaime, a New Jersey-based former top aide to Christie, told me. The challenge for Ciattarelli, and a reason both parties believe that Sherrill retains a small edge, is that Republicans have struggled over the past decade to win elections when Trump isn’t on the ballot. (The dynamic was the same for Democrats when Obama was in the White House.)

Democrats cleaned up in lower-turnout elections during Trump’s first term, and they have done the same so far this year.

“Can somebody who’s not Donald Trump turn out Donald Trump’s voters?” DuHaime asked. “It didn’t happen in 2017 or 2018. Is there something different in 2025? That’s what this election is a test of.”

The outcome in November could also help determine whether Democrats desperate for a path back to federal power gravitate toward candidates such as Sherrill and her House colleague Abigail Spanberger, the party’s nominee in Virginia.

Both women have a background in national security—Spanberger was a CIA agent—and moderate voting records. They’re both waging campaigns devoted to kitchen-table economic issues such as affordability.

(Another amusing biographical twist: Sherrill grew up in Virginia, and Spanberger was born in New Jersey.)

Victories this fall could put one or both women in the conversation for a spot on the Democrats’ national ticket in 2028.

Polls have given Spanberger a wider edge in Virginia than Sherrill in New Jersey, a dynamic that political strategists attribute to a weaker GOP opponent, Lieutenant Governor Winsome Earle-Sears, and the disproportionate impact that the Trump administration’s cuts to the federal workforce have had on the state.

Democratic leaders in New Jersey, however, are confident about Sherrill’s chances. Senator Cory Booker, who is up for reelection next year, told me that the Trump administration’s cuts to health-care programs and its aggressive deportation raids have turned the Latino community against him—a shift that polling has also captured.

The president’s low approval, Booker argued, would drag Ciattarelli down.

“It is stunning to me that he’s not trying to distance himself from somebody who’s wildly unpopular in New Jersey,” Booker said.

Sherrill made clear that she was aware that, as much as voters might disapprove of Trump right now, they’re not falling back in love with Democrats, either.

“What I’m largely hearing from people is that they’re disappointed with both parties. They’re sort of in a nonpartisan place,” Sherrill told me. “They felt unheard by the Democratic Party, and now they feel swindled by the Republican Party.”

Sherrill had not served in elected office before winning her House seat in the Democrats’ 2018 wave. Her military and law-enforcement background helps her appeal to voters who pay little attention to politics, Senator Andy Kim told me.

“She’s not somebody that looks and sounds like somebody who came up through politics their entire life,” he said.

Kim, who served alongside Sherrill in the House before winning a Senate seat last year, told me that the two bonded over their shared experiences as parents of young children—Sherrill has four kids—in Congress. After Sherrill won the primary for governor in June, they talked at length about the state and pored over data gleaned from his 2024 campaign.

“She’s a general-election juggernaut,” Kim said.

Not all Democrats find Sherrill that impressive or exciting.

Adam Green, the co-founder of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee and a former spokesperson for New Jersey’s Democratic Party, is the one who called Sherrill milquetoast, and he endorsed two of her opponents during the primary.

He’s warning Democrats not to see her as a model for 2026 and beyond, urging the party instead to embrace candidates willing to campaign more boldly and aggressively against corporate greed.

“Mikie Sherrill will likely win because of the blue color of her team jersey,” Green told me, “but it will not be because of anything new or inspiring [she offered], or because she tapped into an outsider economic-populist zeitgeist that this moment calls for nationally.”

What Sherrill does have that some Democrats do not, however, is a record of electoral success: She has prevailed in every campaign she’s entered so far.

When I asked her about Green’s critique, she pointed to that winning record.

“I’m presenting a vision of New Jersey that the people of New Jersey want to see, for their kids, for their costs,” Sherrill said. “That’s been pretty compelling so far, and I think it will be in November as well.”
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2025/09/the-democrats-first-must-win-test-of-trumps-second-term/684360/

‘A disgrace’: MKs slam Netanyahu apology to Qatari PM on Doha strike

A Disgrace: MKs Slam Netanyahu’s Apology to Qatari PM over Doha Strike

Members of Knesset Ben-Gvir, Smotrich, Liberman, and Golan have condemned Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for apologizing to Qatar following the Hamas strike in Doha. The politicians criticized Netanyahu’s apology as weak and described it as a disgrace.

In a related event, U.S. President Donald Trump greeted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the White House in Washington, D.C., on September 29, 2025.

(Photo credit: REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst)

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-869015

Lemkin relatives move to block US institute from using his name

**Lemkin Relatives Move to Block US Institute from Using His Name**

The dispute arises after the institute’s repeated accusations against Israel, which began soon after the October 7 massacre.

An “End the Genocide in Gaza” lawn sign was seen in Dearborn, Michigan, U.S., on November 6, 2024.
(Photo Credit: Rebecca Cook/Reuters)

*By Jerusalem Post Staff*
https://www.jpost.com/international/article-869005