https://www.ynetnews.com/article/s1ppj0631e
Once deemed impossible, Haredi women have organized to challenge exclusion from political parties; while no women have entered the Knesset yet, their activism is reshaping political discourse
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/s1ppj0631e
Once deemed impossible, Haredi women have organized to challenge exclusion from political parties; while no women have entered the Knesset yet, their activism is reshaping political discourse
https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-847292
The call with Hirsch, conducted in English due to his American background, was described as long and substantive. Netanyahu’s own advisers reportedly had difficulty following the conversation, leaving the prime minister to speak directly and privately with the rabbi. The follow-up call with the Belz Rebbe lasted approximately 20 minutes.
According to sources familiar with the details, Netanyahu urged the rabbis to avoid issuing public threats or setting deadlines. He emphasized that the coalition was working to reach a draft law compromise and warned that ultimatums could derail those efforts.
At a meeting, the urgent need to formalize the legal status of yeshiva students to allow them to continue their Torah studies without disruption was emphasized, according to the rabbis' offices.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c07zxy98g45o
Canada's general election campaign is underway, a 36-day sprint taking place in unprecedented circumstances.
Voters will consider which party should govern the country just as the US - its neighbour and largest economic partner - launches a trade war and President Donald Trump muses about making Canada the 51st US state.
Domestic issues like housing and immigration will still be important, of course, but for the first time in decades, Canadians will also be grappling with fundamental questions about the country's future when they head to the ballot box on 28 April.
Witkoff said Putin shared the anecdote with him during Witkoff’s second visit to Russia in mid-March, which, he added, got “personal.” Witkoff said Putin gave him a “beautiful portrait” of Trump that Putin had commissioned by a “leading” Russian artist, and asked that Witkoff bring the painting back to the White House.
On the eve of talks in Saudi Arabia, President Trump’s chief negotiator, Steve Witkoff, echoed some of the Kremlin’s main talking points on the Ukraine war, while advocating for future U.S.-Russian relations based on shared business interests.
https://www.newsweek.com/steve-witkoff-ire-takes-vladimir-putin-word-2049307
U.S. special envoy Steve Witkoff drew ire online for his comments about Russian President Vladimir Putin—chiefly that he would "take him at his word" as talks for a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine continue in their ongoing war.
"I just don't see that he [Putin] wants to take all of Europe...I take him at his word in this sense, and I believe the Europeans are beginning to come to that belief, too," he said.
When pressed on Putin's characterization as a tyrant or "someone whose political opponents often die," Witkoff countered that he's "never, ever seen a situation where there isn't two sides to a story, it's just never as black and white as people want to portray, so there are grievances on both sides."
Yaroslav Trofimov, the Wall Street Journal's chief foreign affairs correspondent, wrote on X, formerly Twitter, on Saturday: "It's clear from this that the only difference between Steve Witkoff's and Vladmir Putin's views on the war in Ukraine is that Putin actually knows the names of all the five Ukrainian regions he wants to keep."
Former State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller wrote on X on Sunday: "In summary, Witkoff doesn't know the names of all the Ukrainian provinces occupied by Russia, but somehow knows the people there want to join Russia...and believes Putin doesn't want the rest of Ukraine despite him repeatedly saying he does. Ok."
https://www.newsweek.com/trump-administration-warned-top-republicans-over-possible-nato-move-2048065
The top two Republican lawmakers overseeing the Pentagon in Congress issued a rare joint statement Wednesday, voicing concern over a potential shake-up in U.S. military leadership by the Trump administration.
The pair issued a joint-statement on Wednesday, referencing media reports suggesting the administration is considering changes such as relinquishing the U.S. role as NATO's Supreme Allied Commander Europe and cancelling plans to modernize U.S. Forces Japan to try and meet its goals.
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/03/21/politics/fact-check-trump-oval-office-remarks/index.html
President Donald Trump made at least nine false claims in his Friday remarks to reporters in the Oval Office – including a series of wildly exaggerated statistics on a variety of topics.
Trump used inaccurate figures for the number of votes he received in the 2024 presidential election, US aid to Ukraine, the number of migrants who entered the US during the Biden administration, the US trade deficits with China and Canada, and annual US fentanyl deaths.
He also wrongly declared, again, that Honda announced it is building a new factory in Indiana. He repeated his years-old baseless claim that NATO would no longer have existed if not for his first presidency. He told his familiar unsubstantiated story about large numbers of migrants having come from jails in “the Congo” and elsewhere. And he once more discussed Canada’s dairy tariffs without mentioning a critical fact about them.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/03/21/paul-weiss-trump-executive-action/
Paul Weiss, a prominent law firm that has often represented Democratic clients and causes, is facing widespread criticism online from the legal community after agreeing to provide $40 million in pro bono legal services to the Trump administration to avoid a retaliatory executive order targeting its lawyers and clients
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/03/22/trump-deportations-autopen/
President Donald Trump told reporters Friday evening that he did not sign the controversial proclamation invoking the Alien Enemies Act to quickly deport migrants his administration says are violent gang members from Venezuela.
So what did happen? Did Trump misspeak? Is he trying to deflect responsibility for a decision under heavy legal scrutiny by suggesting he was merely following through on an idea proposed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio? And if he didn’t sign it, who — or what — did?
“I don’t know when it was signed, because I didn’t sign it,” Trump said on the South Lawn of the White House as he prepared to leave for his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey. “Other people handled it. But Marco Rubio’s done a great job. And he wanted them out, and we go along with that. We want to get criminals out of our country.”
Trump’s signature appears on the digital image of the proclamation available for viewing with the Federal Register, the government repository of official documents. And White House Communications Director Steven Cheung said late Friday that Trump did personally sign the proclamation.
https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/405737
Sirens were sounded on Friday evening, just after 10:30 p.m., in localities across central Israel, Judea, Samaria, Jerusalem and the Shfela regions, following a launch from Yemen.
The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit confirmed that a missile launched from Yemen was intercepted by the IAF prior to crossing into Israeli territory.
President Donald Trump has stripped security clearance from a group that includes former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former Vice President Kamala Harris, former President Joe Biden, and “any other member of Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s family.”
The removals—an act of revenge against a broad swath of Trump’s most dire enemies—were made official in a memo signed by the president late on Friday night, according to The New York Times.