Jewish Leadership Council

Jewish Leadership Council
Registration no. 1115343
Headquarters London, UK
Region served
UK
Budget
£2,905,344 (2013)[1]
Website www.thejlc.org

The Jewish Leadership Council was formed in 2003, (as the Jewish Community Leadership Council). The Council was founded by its first Chairman, then President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, Henry Grunwald QC and an array of other senior UK Jewish leaders.

Membership

The JLC includes some senior lay leaders of the major institutions in the Jewish community, however it has been criticised for excluding major institutions with which it has political disagreements. Membership includes the Chairs and Presidents of synagogue movements, leaders of the main charities, welfare organisations and representative bodies as well as a group of Vice-Presidents comprising a number of Jewish VIPs and individual leaders such as The Lord (Michael) Levy, Sir Ronald Cohen, Lord Harry Woolf, Lord Stanley Fink, Sir Trevor Chinn CVO, Leo Noe and former Board president and politician Lord Janner. Jeremy Newmark (former spokesperson for the Chief Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks) was appointed as Chief Executive of the JLC in January 2006. He was succeeded by former Football Association Executive Simon Johnson in 2013.

On 1 June 2009, upon taking office as President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, Mr Vivian Wineman became the second Chairman of the Council.

In July 2009 Conservative Party Treasurers Howard Leigh and Stanley Fink joined the Council as individual members. At the same meeting Mr Mick Davis, Chairman of the United Jewish Israel Appeal was appointed as the first Chairman of the Council's Executive Committee, and Michele Vogel President of WIZO UK became an organisational member of the JLC.

Activities, Reports & Memoranda

In July 2008 the Council published a major report on the future of Jewish schooling in the UK.[2][3][4]

In 2008 the Council launched the 'New Leadership Network', a project designed to create a forum for the development of the next generation heads of the major agencies of the UK Jewish community.[5]

In December 2009 the Council sought and published a legal Opinion from Lord Pannick QC advocating a change in UK law to prevent the issuing of arrest warrants against Israeli leaders without prior consent of the Attorney General.

In early 2010 the Council's Schools Strategy Task Force launched a web portal promoting Jewish Faith based schools in the UK.[6]

In February 2010 the Council hosted a UK visit for Barry Shrage, President of Boston's Combined Jewish Philanthropies, one of the most effective fundraisers in the Jewish world.[7]

In September 2010 the Council published a paper warning that the new Equalities Act could expose Jewish charities to a higher risk of discrimination claims.[8]

In October 2010 following a governance review a 'joint liaison committee' was established to formalise relations between the JLC and The Board of Deputies of British Jews.[9]

In December 2010 the Council advised the Government on its Big Society agenda. In talks with Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government it elicited a commitment that Jewish faith based charities should not have to dilute the Jewish elements of their ethos. The Council published a report[10] on this topic which contained recommendations to both the UK Jewish Voluntary Sector and the Government.[11]

In June 2011 together with BICOM and the Board of Deputies, Council Chair Vivian Wineman, Chair of Trustees Mick Davis and CEO Jeremy Newmark, met Foreign Secretary William Hague to discuss developments in the Middle East.[12][13]

In September 2011 the Council published a report[14] on the impact of its 2008 Commission on Jewish Schools, and the work of the JLC Schools Strategy Implementation Group. The report was launched by JLC Vice-President Leo Noe and Schools Minister Nick Gibb MP at a gathering of 200 key figures from the Jewish Schools Sector. The Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks and Policy Exchange Chairman Daniel Finklestein also spoke at the launch. The report announced the establishment of a new central agency for Jewish schools.[15]

On 16 January 2012 the Council met with Prime Minister David Cameron. The meeting covered topics including the Middle East Peace Process, Equalities Legislation, Terror and Antisemitism, Jewish School, Shechita (Religious Slaughter), Circumcision, and The Big Society.[16][17]

References

External links