Obama names seven to Holocaust memorial council
US President Obama named or renamed seven members of the US
Holocaust Memorial Council, all donors to Democrats and including
representatives from the entertainment, social media and human rights sectors,
as well as a past AIPAC president.
In a release Tuesday, Obama named Tom Bernstein to
another five year term; Bernstein, a major fundraiser for Obama's 2008
presidential campaign, has been chairman of the council since 2010.
An entertainment industry mogul who co-founded the
Chelsea Piers entertainment complex in New York City, Bernstein was first
appointed to the council by President George W. Bush in 2002. He has also been
a leader of Human Rights First, one of the three major human rights watchdogs.
There were six new appointees in Tuesday's announcement,
including three from northern California. Most are involved in communications,
through involvement in the entertainment and social media industries, or
through lobbying. Presidents tend to favor such appointees as effective
fundraisers and conveyors of the memorial's message.
They are:
--Amy Friedkin, based in San Francisco and a major donor
to Jewish and Democratic causes, is a past president of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee and is close to Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), the
minority leader in the US House of Representatives.
--Susan Lowenberg, also from San Francisco, is a real
estate magnate and has served on the board of a number of Jewish groups,
including the American Jewish World Service and the San Francisco JCC. She is
the daughter of a Holocaust survivor.
--Deborah Oppenheimer is executive vice president at
NBCUniversal International Television Production. The daughter of two Holocaust
survivors, she won an Academy Award in 2000 for producing "Into the Arms
of Strageners: Stories of the Kindertransport."
--Cheryl Peisach, the daughter of a survivor, is a
Florida-based importer and distributor of flowers.
--Richard Price, who heads Mesirow Financial, a financial
services firm, is a major player in Chicago-area philanthropy.
--Elliot Schrage, based in the Bay area, is the vice
president for communications at Facebook. He has been a fellow at the Council
on Foreign Relations and served on the board of the International League for
Human Rights.
All of the appointees have given predominantly to
Democrats, although a number have also given occasionally to Republicans.
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