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The Jewish Leadership Council has more questions to answer

Although it’s unclear which, if any, of the allegations reported by the JC last week were accepted by the JLC, the facts of the story which are publicly known raise a number of further questions for the organisation’s trustees.

February 15, 2018 11:39
Jeremy Newmark (looking at camera) and the JLC delegation at Downing Street in 2012
3 min read

The still-unfolding scandal around Jeremy Newmark, the former Jewish Leadership Council chief executive, should remind us that a charity’s most important asset is trust. 

While our relationships with businesses are transactional — we exchange one thing for another — for causes we believe in we donate, volunteer and offer public support without expecting something in return. 

When we lose trust in a business, we can still decide on a case-by-case basis whether to buy their products; but the loss of trust in a charity is an existential challenge. 

Although it’s unclear which, if any, of the allegations reported by the JC last week were accepted by the JLC, the facts of the story which are publicly known raise a number of further questions for the organisation’s trustees.