‘Netanyahu will heed High Court order,’ says Zohar; Melcer: ‘Red line’ crossed
“As I know him, the prime minister will comply with the High Court decision,” Zohar said in an interview with Kan Reshet Bet. “There will not be a constitutional crisis.”
“As I know him, the prime minister will comply with the High Court decision,” Zohar said in an interview with Kan Reshet Bet. “There will not be a constitutional crisis.”
Channel 14 commentators criticized Kushner and Witkoff's involvement in the US deal with Iran, claiming that they're turning their backs on the country in a time of need.
"The current government is no longer capable of advancing Israel," said the former prime minister during an interview with KAN News.
The petitions argue that the secrecy of the vote was not a technical formality, but a central legal protection meant to allow MKs to vote freely.
The study revealed that the majority of the public in Israel, 55%, sees internal polarization and disagreement as the most dangerous threat to the country’s continued existence.
"The term of the Netanyahu government began with a civil war, continued with the massacre of the seven in October, and ends with a historic failure against Iran," said Bennett.
Explaining why she has voted against the legislation, Haskel said in her interview with the Post that, “we are at war, and when we have a pyramid of priorities, security always has to be on the top."
The prime minister also failed to convince the Americans to include Iran’s ballistic missile program in the agreement, or even in the negotiations, Lapid said.
They served, they are done waiting for the haredim, and they will decide who forms the next government.
Gantz also expressed doubt that the current US-Iran deal would hold, particularly with how the framework relates to Lebanon.
Gotliv was unimpressed by Amit Segal’s report on Netanyahu’s intention to cancel the Likud primaries, saying that he was "diminishing the leadership strength of the Prime Minister."