Fleur Hassan-Nahoum

Fleur Hassan-Nahoum (Hebrew: פלר חסן-נחום; born 1973)[1] is an Israeli politician, media expert and policy maker.

She currently serves as Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem in charge of foreign relations, international economic development and tourism.

[8] After immigrating to Israel in 2001 during the Second Intifada,[9] she served as senior associate with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, an international aid organization, and from 2007 as CEO of Tikva Children's Home, an orphan-and-poverty-relief organization which supports homeless, abandoned and abused Jewish children in the former Soviet Union.

[16] As deputy mayor, Hassan-Nahoum sees increasing participation in the workforce and improving education in the Arab sector as major challenges for the municipality.

[17] In 2020, Hassan-Nahoum was one of the founding members of the UAE–Israel Business Council, alongside Justine Zwerling, which was established following the Abraham Accords Peace Treaty between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain.

The Likud claimed that her links to the New Israel Fund and other left wing groups made it impossible for them to support Elkin.

[1] She has also spoken publicly on developing Jerusalem as a technology hub; transport and mobility issues; budgetary efficiency; good governance; and on the rights of cancer patients.

[23] Hassan-Nahoum came under fire for attending an event organised by the far-left Emek Shaveh group, and sponsored by the New Israel Fund and the European Union.

"[25] During the 2023 Israel-Hamas war, she said that "woke" left-wing activists had formed a "toxic alliance" with Hamas to fuel antisemitism in the UK.