No matter what decision comes out of this week’s critical Supreme Court hearing, Israel appears to now be divided beyond repair.
Benjamin Netanyahu
If the government can end the wave of terrorism, it must do so; if it can’t, it should let someone else try.
The call from National Unity MK Matan Kahana comes after Yesh Atid lawmaker Elazar Stern expressed a similar desire.
Who knows, maybe it will be the Orthodox Jewish parties that will thwart their own coalition’s controversial judicial reform.
The Panda Hotel in the Mt. Hermon resort town of Neve Ativ was flooded with phony negative reviews for hosting the “dictator.”
The likelihood of an escalation has increased dramatically because of the disagreement over judicial reform.
The protesters won’t stop until they bring Netanyahu’s government down.
Unless the Knesset mandates transparency, PMs will continue to play things close to the vest, because the public likes a strong leader.
Attorney General Gali Baharav-Miara has called for the justices to reject the demand.
A visit could make the PM “a stage prop for prominent Democrats to lecture and embarrass,” says American Enterprise Institute’s Michael Rubin.