Well, I also said that the U.S. government funds 88 percent of their budget. As long as they do that, the organisation is not going anywhere.
And, in Washington D.C. a Jewish name can imply political connections.
See their biographies.
Chair: D. Jeffrey Hirschberg
D. Jeffrey Hirschberg was named to the board by President George W. Bush in 2002 and served until 2010. He came to the board as Director of the Corporate Responsibility Practice at Howrey, Simon, Arnold and White, LLP (global legal advisors). Mr. Hirschberg retired from Ernst & Young in 1999 as vice chairman/governmental affairs. Previously, he worked as a private attorney in Washington, D.C., and Milwaukee, Wisconsin. From 1972-1980, Mr. Hirschberg worked for the U.S. Justice Department as a special attorney and deputy chief of the criminal division’s special litigation section. He also prosecuted civil and criminal matters as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Milwaukee.
President: Michael J. Abramowitz
Michael J. Abramowitz is president of Freedom House. Before joining Freedom House in February 2017, he was director of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Levine Institute for Holocaust Education. He led the museum’s genocide prevention efforts and later oversaw its public education programs.
He was previously National Editor and then White House correspondent for the Washington Post. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and former fellow at the German Marshall Fund and the Hoover Institution. A graduate of Harvard College, he is also a board member of the National Security Archive.
I think both of them have the political connections to make sure that funding of the organisation will continue.