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Prof. Yedidia Stern presented President Isaac Herzog with JPPI’s 2025 Annual Assessment

President Herzog: “This is a troubling and alarming report with many challenges definitely following October 7 and the impact on Jewish communities all over the world.”

Credit: Avi Kaner

The Jewish People Policy Institute (JPPI) has published its Annual Assessment of the Jewish people in Israel and the Diaspora for the year 5785 (2024/25). The report was presented to the President of the State of Israel, Isaac Herzog, and to the Government of Israel.

The report, serving as a central tool for policy-making, presents a comprehensive and updated picture of Israel and the Jewish people worldwide: geopolitical, social, demographic, and identity trends, along with strategic recommendations for the coming years, based on in-depth analyses by JPPI experts.

This year’s Assessment points to worsening or negative trends in almost all indicators describing the current reality of Israel and the Jewish people. Nonetheless, the report includes a series of strategic recommendations and possible courses of action to confront today’s challenges.

Prof. Yedidia Stern presents President Isaac Herzog with JPPI’s 2025 Annual Assessment. Photo: Kobi Gideon, GPO

At the heart of JPPI’s Annual Assessment  are six gauges of Jewish well-being – six key drivers that shape the future of Israel and the Jewish people: Demography, Cohesion, Geopolitics, the Israel-U.S. Relationship, Resilience, and Identity. Each gauge measures whether the Jewish people are in decline, troubled, maintaining, prospering, or thriving.

  • Demography remains stable and positive, with Jewish population growth led by Israel, though emigration of young, secular Israelis has risen.
  • Cohesion has weakened, as unity after October 7 gave way to renewed polarization over the war, hostage negotiations, and the Haredi draft exemption.
  • Geopolitics reflects mounting international isolation, with growing criticism of Israel, challenges in the international legal arena, and moves toward recognition of Palestine.
  • The Israel-U.S. Relationship remains Israel’s most important anchor, strengthened by joint operations and strategic alignment, but is fragile amid political polarization.
  • Resilience has declined sharply under two converging pressures: surging antisemitism across the West and intensifying international lawfare, including ICC warrants against Israeli leaders.
  • Identity is strained, with strong Diaspora solidarity through fundraising and volunteering, but growing estrangement among progressive and younger Jews.

Taken together, the gauges show that the well-being of the Jewish people deteriorated in 2024-2025, as resilience, cohesion, and identity have declined under the combined weight of war, antisemitism, and diplomatic pressure.

President Herzog responded: “This is a troubling and alarming report with many challenges definitely following October 7 and the impact on Jewish communities all over the world. What’s most important for us is Jewish resilience, the ability of all communities to function and flourish amidst these challenges, and of course, keep the centrality of Israel in their heart and in their deeds, and most importantly, to see our hostages back home and an end to the war.”

JPPI President Prof. Yedidia Stern added: “Israel stands at a crossroads: massive security achievements have opened a regional window of opportunity, but without a political horizon and without addressing the internal crisis, the country risks sliding into prolonged strategic isolation. The key challenge is to restore public trust and create a new social compact, based on a fair distribution of burdens and pragmatic constitutional reform.”

JPPI’s strategic recommendations include:

  • Define a clear political objective for the “day after” in Gaza—rehabilitation and transfer of governance in the Strip to bolster international legitimacy.
  • Restrain extremist rhetoric in government and halt declarations about “expulsion” or “destruction.”
  • Launch a proactive diplomatic initiative in Europe, Asia, and moderate Arab states.
  • Integrate Diaspora Jewry into Israel’s decision-making through regular institutionalized forums.
  • Adopt a “Thin Constitution” and reform the system of governance, including resolution of Haredi conscription crisis.
  • Strengthen ties with the new Israeli diaspora through civil society organizations.
  • Adapt absorption services for immigrants from Western countries, in light of the wave of global antisemitism.
  • Develop a national plan to combat antisemitism, led by Israel as the nation-state of the Jewish people.
  • Establish international study tracks at Israeli universities to attract Jewish students from abroad.

Conversation with Batya Ungar-Sargon

In this episode, Tamar Ish Shalom sits down with journalist and commentator Batya Ungar-Sargon, whose journey from progressive to outspoken critic of “woke” culture has made her one of the most provocative voices in American political discourse. Batya is the author of two books (a third on Jews and the left is in the works) – Bad News: How Woke Media Is Undermining Democracy and Second Class: How the Elites Betrayed America’s Working Men and Women. She calls herself a “MAGA leftist” and an enthusiastic supporter of Donald Trump, while at the same time insisting that the voices of ordinary Americans be part of the national conversation. Agree or disagree with her, Batya challenges assumptions about media, politics, and democracy itself. Tamar and Batya discuss her unlikely trajectory, the blind spots of American elites, and why talking about class is so often avoided. Join us for a conversation that will make you stop, think, and maybe even rethink.