Jewish Policy Center

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jewish Policy Center, founded in 1985 and now located at 50 F Street, NW, Suite 100, Washington, D.C. is a think tank tied closely to the Republican Jewish Coalition.[1]

According to Matthew Brooks, director of both the Jewish Policy Center and the Republican Jewish Coalition, the Policy Center is nonpartisan and focuses solely on issues, both foreign and domestic. "In the past, we've focused on a number of domestic-policy issues, social-security reform, education. But right now, there is so much focus and attention on these critical foreign-policy issues." [2]

Center fellows include Norman Podhoretz, Michael Medved and Ruth Wisse.[3]

The Center has sponsored many forums around the country billed as "Liberal Roots, Conservative Solutions".[4] It has lobbied for school vouchers,[5] supported the Israeli pullout from Gaza,[6] and worked to draw attention to antisemitism on American college campuses.[7]

References

  1. "Homegrown Pundit Appointed to Think Tank", Jewish Exponent, March 8, 2007, by Bryan Schwartzman
  2. Homegrown Pundit Appointed to Think Tank, Jewish Exponent, March 08, 2007, by Bryan Schwartzman http://www.jewishexponent.com/article/12378/
  3. "New think tank begun by Jewish Republicans", Jewish Exponent, October 1, 1993, by Lisa Hostein
  4. Listing of Jewish Policy Center events
  5. Conservative Jews lobby for school-choice programs: Say movement will help battle 'continuity crisis', by Carol Innerst, the Washington Times, March 19, 1997
  6. "In a Time of Dissent, Jewish Conservatives Close Ranks", by Nathaniel Popper, Forward , April 30, 2004
  7. "A New Anti-Semitism Takes Root on American campuses", Jewish Exponent, Sept. 13, 2007

External links

http://www.jewishpolicycenter.org

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