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Israeli politics & society

Key background
  • The State of Israel was founded in 1948 with its foundational document being its Declaration of Independence. This declaration confirmed Israel’s nature as a Jewish and democratic state where all citizens were viewed as equals before the law, and freedom of conscience, worship, education, and culture were to be guaranteed.
  • Israel’s constitution is uncodified, but practically oriented towards a number of “Basic Laws” concerning state institutions and rights. They can only be overturned by a supermajority vote in the Knesset.
  • Similarly to the UK, Israeli government has three branches: the legislature (Knesset), judiciary, and executive (cabinet lead by the Prime Minister). The President is elected by members of the Knesset for a single seven-year term and acts as its head of state, but this role is almost entirely ceremonial.
  • Israel uses pure proportional representation to elect its MKs. As this functionally precludes any one party securing an outright majority, Israel is governed by coalitions formed by the leader of the party that generally wins the most seats.
  • The current President is Isaac Herzog, and the Prime Minister is Benjamin Netanyahu of the Likud. Other coalition partners include United Torah Judaism, Shas, the Religious Zionist Party, Otzma Yehudit, New Hope, and Noam.
President Isaac Herzog lays a wreath during a ceremony marking Holocaust Remembrance Day at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, April 14, 2026.
President Isaac Herzog lays a wreath during a ceremony marking Holocaust Remembrance Day at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, April 14, 2026. Photo by Oren Ben Hakoon/POOL

Updated April 14, 2026

Israel marks Holocaust Remembrance Day

What’s happened: This morning a memorial siren sounded across Israel in honour of Holocaust Remembrance Day.

  • The traditional opening ceremony at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem on Monday evening was this year prerecorded and was held without any audience because of the ongoing security situation.
  • In his speech President Herzog noted, “There are those who seek to destroy this home that we built, even today. For two and a half years, the State of Israel has been at war, since that frightful day, the October 7th massacre. In every place and every site I visit, I see Israeli society and the spirit that animates it. Across the length and breadth of the land, in bomb shelters, at sites destroyed by missile attacks, in hospitals, in command centres, and volunteer hubs, I see the solidarity, the heroism, the devotion, and the mutual responsibility.”
  • He used the opportunity to call for national unity, saying, “History has repeatedly taught us the high price of internal fighting and division and, alternatively, the strength of mutual responsibility and fraternity. Based on that memory, based on everything that our people has endured, we must say to ourselves, especially today: We did not rise from the fire of the crematoria only to burn in the fire of quarrel.”
  • Prime Minister Netanyahu said in his speech that the establishment of the State of Israel may not have ended antisemitism and belligerence against the Jewish people but, as opposed to the past, the people who seek to destroy us bring destruction down upon themselves.
  • Netanyahu said, “This year we will remember that the State of Israel is at its all-time peak in strength. Who could have imagined 80 years ago that our bold air force pilots and the American military’s pilots would defend, wing-to-wing, the Middle East, Israel and the United States of course, to defend civilization from barbarism.”  
  • As in previous speeches, Netanyahu connected the memory of the Holocaust to the Iranian threat. Netanyahu said, “Indeed, we have destroyed large parts of the industry of death that the Iranian regime had developed over decades: the nuclear plants, missiles, UAVs, the naval fleet, the air force, and vast quantities of other weapons systems. Had we not acted, the names Natanz, Fordow, Isfahan and Parchin might have been remembered eternally in infamy, just like Auschwitz, Treblinka, Majdanek, and Sobibor. But we acted, and how—in an unprecedented historic partnership with President Trump and the United States.”
  • Netanyahu also criticised Europe, which he said “has forgotten so much since the Holocaust, can learn many things from us, primarily: the sharp distinction between good and evil, which, in the moment of truth, requires us to go to war for the sake of good, for the sake of life. Europe, which vowed after World War II to defend the good, is infested today with a deep moral weakness. Europe is losing control over its identity, its values and its commitment to protect civilisation from barbarism.”

Context: Israel formally designated “Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day,” on the Hebrew date of 27 Nisan in 1951, after the Knesset debated several options.

  • The date chosen is a week after Passover, close to the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, which began on Passover. For the then young State of Israel the main driver was to connect remembrance of the Holocaust with Jewish resistance. Whereas International Holocaust Remembrance Day on January 27 marks the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz-Birkenau.
  • This year there are 116,880 Holocaust survivors still alive and living in Israel. Just over 13,000 survivors died in the last year. There were 115 Holocaust survivors who were among the thousands evacuated from their homes as a result of the latest Iran war.            
  • In Israel, the memorial is also an opportunity to reflect on growing antisemitism around the world. There have been over 1,000 antisemitic incidents around the world in the last year, resulting in 20 Jews killed, 15 of whom  in the terror attack on Bondi Beach. This figure reflects a 30 year high.

Looking ahead: Direct talks between the ambassadors of Israel and Lebanon are due to begin later today in Washington.

  • In parallel, the operation Bint Jbeil is expected to continue for a few more days.
  • Next Tuesday Israel will mark Memorial Day for those fallen in wars and terror attacks, and the following day celebrate Israel’s 78th Independence Day.

March 31, 2026

Death penalty law passed but unlikely to withstand judicial review

A vote on the death penalty for terrorists who murder Israeli civilians at the auditorium in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, March 30, 2026.
A vote on the death penalty for terrorists who murder Israeli civilians at the auditorium in the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, March 30, 2026. Photo by Chaim Goldberg/Flash90

What’s happened: The Knesset passed the Death Penalty for Terrorists bill into law last night, codifying into law what had been for years a slogan of the far-right. Opposition party Yisrael Beiteinu, an early pioneer of the slogan that even in its days as part of a coalition never seriously advanced the proposal, supported the bill. United Torah Judaism, an ultra-orthodox party inside the coalition, opposed it.

  • The law has drawn the ire of liberals in Israel and nearly all of Israel’s allies. It calls for a mandatory death penalty for those convicted of terrorist murder of Israelis.
  • The law is not expected to survive challenge in the Israeli Supreme Court, though as the legislation itself is largely understood to be populistic rabble-rousing, this may be the point.
  • Among its many weaknesses before judicial review: the distinctions it makes between crimes in the West Bank and inside Israel, the mandatory nature of the penalty (rather than execution being a maximum sentence), and the very fact of bringing a form of civilian law into the West Bank that isn’t limited only to Israeli citizens.
  • Nearly every professional body in Israel opposed the legislation. The National Security Council, a body inside the Prime Minister’s Office, warned that aspects of it contradicted international law. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs warned that it could put Israel in violation of treaty commitments.  Justice Ministry officials have also noted problematic the application of civilian legislation in the West Bank to non-Israelis (since 1967, an emergency order has allowed Israeli legislation to apply to Israeli settlers living in the West Bank, but the Knesset has largely refrained from legislation that directly applies to the Palestinians).
  • As a result, it is highly likely that the Supreme Court will determine that this new law is illegal, which would only add to the ongoing tension between the current government and the court.      
  • Itamar Ben-Gvir, the politician most associated with the bill, was seen in Knesset opening champagne to celebrate the bill’s passage, an image that rankled many in Israel not just for its poor taste and bad decorum, but also because it later emerged that at the time that was going on, senior officials already knew what the public did not yet know, namely that four IDF soldiers had been killed in combat.

March 12, 2026

War costs mount as Israel races to pass budget

An electronic board displaying market data at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in Tel Aviv, March 2, 2026.
An electronic board displaying market data at the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange in Tel Aviv, March 2, 2026. Photo by Yehoshua Yosef/Flash90

What’s happened: The budget deadline is perhaps the most urgent economic issue connected to the war in Iran, but it is far from the only one, or even the most significant.

  • Fighting the war — on multiple fronts — is itself very expensive. Writing in Yediot Ahronot, Sever Plocker estimates, using figures from the Twelve Day War last year, that direct war expenditures can amount to 60 billion shekels per month. The loss of output from the partial shutdown of the economy amounts to some 30 billion shekels. Taken together with the costs of recovery and reconstruction from war damage, the war’s direct costs easily top 100 billion shekels (almost £25 billion) for each month that it rages.
  • Direct costs to the US are enormous in absolute terms ($11 billion dollars so far, according to an estimate in this morning’s New York Times), but unlike in Israel, negligible as a portion of total economic output.
  • The war threatens to impact the global economy too in ways which will affect Israel as well. Energy market disruptions could send the global economy into a recession, while a spike in energy prices could set in motion price inflation.
  • On the budget itself, the cabinet met Wednesday on Zoom and agreed to add 28 billion shekels to the 2026 defence budget. The deficit target was raised to 5.1% from 3.9%.
  • The budget also included a large amount set aside to “coalition funds,” the local euphemism for direct earmarks for the Haredi sector and West Bank settlers. This was already in the vicinity of 5 billion shekels and in the new budget approaches 6 billion. Israeli commentators speculated that this is what made possible the agreement of the Ultra-orthodox parties to vote for the budget despite not getting the conscription law, which had been their principal legislative priority for this Parliament.
  • Opposition MK Gilad Kariv of the Democrats described the budget as a “looting budget,” because it was, in his words, “the seizure of property and money in wartime.”

February 24, 2026

Israel to invest in more AI infrastructure

What’s happening: On Sunday, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Energy and Infrastructure Minister, Eli Cohen, announced and confirmed the Israeli government’s decision to invest in artificial intelligence infrastructure, starting with accelerating the building of a new server farm.

  • Addressing a government meeting, Netanyahu stated that the decision was a “major move because, ultimately, leadership in Artificial Intelligence (AI), and in my opinion, in quantum as well, will be a decisive factor in the continued cultivation of our power,” and “about gaining immense power advantages on a global scale.”
  • Netanyahu also confirmed that developed AI power was an “integral” part of this vision, acting as a force multiplier against Israel’s small territory and population.
  • Minister Cohen stated that the decision would “remove barriers and accelerate the processes for building data centres, which is a vital step on Israel’s path to becoming a global AI superpower.”
  • He also confirmed that AI infrastructure initiated in just the last three months represented over 5% of energy consumption of State of Israel, with more likely to come in the future.

Context: Israel has long been recognised as a world-leading high-tech powerhouse, and sits at the cutting edge of AI development, generative AI, and machine learning.

  • Israel has the world’s highest Research & Development (R&D) expenditure as a percentage of GDP fuelling its status as the Start-Up Nation. 
  • Also this week, the Haifa-based Technion Israel Institute of Technology was ranked the best university in computer science and artificial intelligence research in Israel and Europe, as well as among the top ten most important universities when researching machine learning.
  • In December 2025, Israel joined the US-led strategic initiative Pax Silica which is focused on securing and strengthening AI and technology supply chain.
  • Israel’s leadership in AI, was a contributing factor behind the “Roadmap for UK-Israel Bilateral Relations,” signed by Israel and the UK in  March 2023. The agreement established a strategic partnership between the two countries and included a substantial section on Science, Innovation and Technology, of which a AI was an important component.
  • The roadmap specifies a £20M framework for supporting academic and R&D ties between the UK and Israel. There was also a commitment to deepen further the bilateral science and technology partnership through “new and ambitious initiatives.”
  • Within that cooperation, Innovate UK and the Israel Innovation Authority, were jointly responsible for “supporting UK – Israel business led collaborative research and development (CR&D) projects resulting in new products, industrial processes, or services.”
  • Among the projects was UK – Israel AI Drug Discovery Taskforce. A group of senior representatives from leading pharmaceutical companies, start-ups, academic institutions, hospitals, Health Maintenance Organisations, and governmental agencies – from the UK and from Israel. The task force was established by SIN Israel, recognising the UK and Israel’s excellence on AI in Drug Discovery, and in order to promote the collaboration around this topic.
  • In December 2025, Israel was one of eight key countries invited to a White House summit on secure AI supply chains alongside Japan, South Korea, Singapore, the Netherlands, the UK, the UAE, and Australia.
  • AI is also emerging as a developing soft power and diplomatic tool, especially in the context of the Abraham Accords. In December 2025, Holon Institute of Technology (HIT) and the UK Abraham Accords Group (UKAAG) signed a landmark Memorandum of Understanding aimed at deepening artificial intelligence cooperation between Israel, the UK, and nations participating in the Abraham Accords.
  • Nvidia, the US-based tech company is also planning to invest $1.5 billion into Israel, specifically server farms. Israel is now Nvidia’s second-largest R&D hub outside the US, with more than 5000 employees spread across multiple facilities.

Looking ahead: Indian Prime Minister Modi is due to arrive in Israel tomorrow and address the Knesset. The two countries are also expected to sign a number of agreements including cooperation in emerging technologies, such as AI, quantum computing and cyber technology.

  • While the Israeli government had originally planned to build two new power stations by the end of the decade, this has since been superseded and will double, including those based on both gas and renewable energy sources.
  • The UK-Israel AI collaboration is striving towards a “2030 Roadmap” according to the 2023 Memorandum of Understanding.

January 29, 2026

Israeli government passes first reading of budget

A vote on the state budget at the assembly hall of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, March 13, 2024.
A vote on the state budget at the assembly hall of the Knesset, the Israeli parliament in Jerusalem, March 13, 2024. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

What’s happened: The coalition survived a budget vote in Parliament yesterday when a first reading of the 2026 budget passed by a 62 to 55 majority.

  • The ultra-Orthodox parties had threatened to boycott the vote and had, until yesterday, refused to support the budget without  securing a new bill on draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox public first.
  • The three ultra-Orthodox parties are the Sephardic Shas party, as well as the two Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodox parties, Degel Ha-Torah and Agudat Yisrael, which together run on a joint list known as United Torah Judaism (UTJ). Agudat Yisrael is the party of the Hasidic community and Degel Ha-Torah of the non-Hasidic Ashkenazi Haredi community, known informally as ‘Lithuanians.’
  • A vote scheduled for earlier this week had to be scuttled once it became clear that the coalition did not have a majority. Wednesday’s vote was made possible by Degel Ha-Torah’s decision to support the budget even without a final agreement on the conscription bill. Shas followed suit (though its leader Aryeh Deri was absent at the vote), but Agudat Yisrael did not vote with the coalition.
  • The chairman of Agudat Yisrael Yitzchak Goldknopf tied his party’s decision to abstain from the vote to his dissatisfaction with the steps taken against ultra-Orthodox draft-dodgers in the absence of a new law exempting them from service. “We cannot stand by,” he said in the Knesset debate. “This government will be remembered as the one who puts young men behind bars.”
  • Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich hailed the new budget and the performance of the Israeli economy in general. “After two years of a costly war, the State of Israel is a powerhouse of strength,” he told members at the opening of yesterday’s parliamentary debate. “We predict a 5.2 percent growth in GDP in the coming year. Inflation is returning to the target range, between 2% and 2.5%, we are curbing the cost of living and preserving the value of the money of Israeli citizens.”
  • Opposition MK’s slammed the budget, with Yair Lapid describing it is as “unhinged” and another member of his party criticising in particular the record-breaking 7.5 billion-shekel allocation of “coalition funds,” the Israeli euphemism for direct political earmarks which mostly benefit the ultra-Orthodox community and West Bank settlers.

Context: Passing a first reading was a major hurdle for the 2026 budget and for the governing coalition in general. By law the Finance Committee is assigned 60 days to review the budget between the first and second reading. If the Knesset cannot pass a budget in its final form by March 31, parliament is automatically dissolved and new elections are scheduled within two months. In this year’s case, that would be only a minor drama as elections are currently scheduled for no later than October of this year.

  • When no budget is in effect, the state operates by the so-called “one twelfth rule,” whereby all outlays from the last agreed budget are maintained on a month-to-month basis until a new budget is passed. In 2020, Israel operated on such a continuation budget for the entire fiscal year.
  • The current budget proposal projects 812 billion shekels (about £190 billion) in expenditures, of which 112 billion shekels (about £26 billion) is slated for defence. There will be an operating deficit of about 3.9% of GDP, significantly lower then the figures for 2025 (4.7%), 2024 (6.8%), and 2023 (4.2%), but still much higher than the operating deficit during 2002, the last full year before the war in Gaza broke out, when it stood at 1.9% of GDP. In 2020, the year of the pandemic, the deficit was a staggering 11.4% of GDP.
  • The political drama in the lead-up to the budget vote had little to do with the actual budget and more to do with the contentious efforts by the government to come up with a compromise on ultra-orthodox draft exemptions. Though no final compromise was reached, negotiations with the Chair of the Foreign and Defence Committee and the Committee’s legal counsel on a few controversial passages in the text of a draft form of that bill reached a breakthrough on Tuesday. 
  • The current version of the conscription bill would grant a blanket exemption for full-time yeshiva students and set modest targets for drafting ultra-Orthodox men who are not enrolled in full-time study. There are currently 80,000 military-age ultra-Orthodox men who have avoided entirely national service. The IDF says it needs at 12,000 to meet its current manpower shortage.
  • The version of the bill currently being advanced would ostensibly force a number close to that (but still smaller) to enlist, however, as critics point out, many of the legal sanctions for evading the draft, such as a cut in daycare subsidies for fathers who avoid mandatory services, would become dead letters, almost guaranteeing no real enforcement of the draft requirement. The bill would also end legal sanctions against those who dodged the draft in the year leading up to the bill as well. In its current form, it is likely to be challenged in court — and overturned.
  • The Committee’s legal counsel had earlier blocked text that the coalition MK’s favoured with the warning that in its current form, the law would easily be struck down by the Supreme Court as violating the equality provisions of Israel’s quasi-constitutional Basic Laws. The exact phrasing of the new compromise solution is not yet known, but is widely expected to be struck down anyway on similar grounds.
  • Historically in Israel, coalitions are fractious with different factions functioning at cross purposes with each other. The current narrow, right-wing, coalition in power since the election of 2022 has been unusually solid and stable, with few major areas of disagreement despite being remarkably unpopular in public opinion polls since its first months in power. The issue of draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox public has been one of the only issue that has emerged as a major point of contention inside the otherwise relatively united coalition.

Looking ahead: Following the successful vote last night, the budget bill moves back to the Knesset Finance Committee. It will need to pass a second and third reading in the plenum to become law.

  • Even with a budget, the coalition will still need to conjure a compromise on the conscription bill to stay in power to the end of this parliament’s term. For that compromise to have any legal validity it will have to involve language that does not invite intervention from the Supreme Court invalidating the law entirely. Neither of these events — and certainly not both — appear likely at this time.

December 24, 2025

New revelations reignites Qatargate scandal

Eli Feldstein, who were arrested in the so-called Qatargate investigation seen at the District Court in Tel Aviv, on May 15, 2025.
Eli Feldstein, who were arrested in the so-called Qatargate investigation seen at the District Court in Tel Aviv, on May 15, 2025. Photo by Avshalom Sassoni/Flash90

What’s happened: An explosive interview by a former spokesperson for Prime Minister Netanyahu regarding the leaking of classified documents, dominated headlines in Israel and ignited reactions on all sides of the political divide.

  • Eli Feldstein, a former spokesperson for Netanyahu and a suspect in two ongoing criminal investigations into national security breaches in the Prime Minister’s Office, spoke at length on the programme Yihye Tov on the public broadcaster Kan. The interview was split into three parts, with the first two broadcast over the last two nights and the third due to be broadcast tonight.
  • The interview on Kan as well as an investigative report on the Hebrew i24 network sparked renewed interest in two overlapping scandals: the leaked classified documents and the Qatari influence campaign in the Prime Minister’s Office. Feldstein is connected to the ongoing investigation into both.
  • In the parts already broadcast, Feldstein confirms that the leak of classified information to the German newspaper Bild in September 2024 was done to influence Israeli public opinion and reduce pressure on the Prime Minister on the hostage issue. In the second part of the interview, broadcast last night, Feldstein alleges that Netanyahu knew of the leak beforehand and approved of it afterward.
  • He does not offer any specific proof of Netanyahu’s alleged knowledge of the leak beforehand, in contrast to the very specific details he does provide about Netanyahu’s alleged subsequent approval  as well as the Prime Minister’s alleged direct involvement in an effort to plant a question at a press conference after the leak which would allow Netanyahu to insinuate in his answer that the IDF had deliberately hiding the information in the leaked document from him.
  • In the first part of the interview, broadcast two nights ago, Feldstein paints  a picture of Netanyahu focused on crafting a media strategy that would absolve him of “responsibility” for the October 7 massacre.
  • The Prime Minister’s Office denounced Feldstein’s statements as “a long series of false and recycled allegations” from someone with personal motives trying to deflect responsibility from himself.

Context: The revelations of the last 48 hours concern two separate scandals, with overlapping involvement from three key figures close to the Prime Minister.

  • The first scandal, which was the focus of most of the interview that was broadcast on the Kan public broadcaster, concerns the unauthorised handling of classified documents, allegedly in an attempt to influence domestic Israeli public opinion.
  • The alleged actions occurred in the days immediately following the murder of six Israeli hostages in a Gaza tunnel. On August 31, 2024, IDF forces discovered the bodies of six hostages who had been executed by their captors one or two days before. The hostages had survived eleven months of captivity, abuse, and deliberate starvation since their abduction by Hamas on October 7, 2023.
  • When the Hamas terrorists detected an Israeli forces operating nearby, they chose to murder the hostages to ensure that they would not be rescued, as had happened only a few days earlier with the Israeli Bedouin hostage Qaid Farhan al-Qadi. The discovery of the bodies sparked outrage in Israel leading to the largest demonstrations at any point in the two years of the war, with estimates of over 500,000 people assembled at various protest sites on September 1 as well as a general strike.
  • It was in this context that the Prime Minister’s spokesperson Eli Feldstein leaked a classified intelligence assessment from months earlier that speculated that Hamas was using the hostage issue to manipulate the Israeli public and divide it.
  • According to Feldstein, the documents were deliberately leaked to a non-Israeli media outlet not subject to Israeli censorship because no Israeli outlet would have been able to legally reveal classified information that had not been cleared for publication.
  • The leak, and subsequent reporting about the leak, took the wind out of the sails of the protest movement, and the pressure on the Prime Minister to reach a hostage deal rapidly abated after the initial burst of anger over the murdered six hostages.
  • Feldstein himself was not authorised to see the classified documents in question. He was also not directly employed by the Prime Minster’s Office, as he had not been granted the necessary security clearance. His salary was not paid for by the PMO, but rather through a complicated arrangement where money was transferred to him allegedly from an American lobbyist with connections to Qatar. In the interview, Feldstein claimed he did not know about the Qatari connection at the time.
  • The second, overlapping, scandal concerns an alleged Qatari influence campaign in the Prime Minister’s Office, involving Feldstein himself and two other figures considered very close to Netanyahu, his aide Jonatan Urich and the lobbyist Yisrael (“Srulik”) Einhorn.
  • Feldstein spoke very little about the Qatar affair in the first two parts of the interview. The third part will be broadcast tonight. 
  • At the same time, an investigative report on the Hebrew i24 channel, normally seen as broadly sympathetic to Netanyahu, revealed a close coordination between Urich and Einhorn to release statements to the Israeli press, ostensibly reflecting the views of senior security officials, which tallied with Qatari priorities and very often disparaged Egyptian role in the hostage negotiations. Einhorn’s PR firm had earlier received payment from Qatar to promote the country’s image in the lead up to the 2022 World Cup.

Reactions: Most politicians and media figures aligned with the governing coalition denounced Feldstein and defended Netanyahu, with the exception of Minister Amichai Chikli (Likud) who said that there was “no way to defend what was revealed” and called for an investigation into the Qatar affair.

  • Those opposed to Netanyahu were scathing in their criticism. Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said that “Netanyahu’s office betrayed the State of Israel and IDF soldiers during wartime and acted on behalf of Qatar for financial gain, and Netanyahu himself is covering it up…Whether Netanyahu knew or did not know that his office was working for the enemy in time of war, both possibilities require his immediate resignation.” In other media appearance, Bennett repeatedly used words like “treason” and “betrayal” to describe the alleged actions of the Prime Minister and some of his closest advisers.
  • Gadi Eisenkot, chair of the new Yashar party, and briefly a minister in Netanyahu’s expanded war cabinet, said that “while the country was shaking with anger and pain over the murder of our six hostages in the tunnels, while the Israeli people went into the streets heartbroken—the prime minister wasn’t engaged in getting the rest of the hostages back, but rather in psychological warfare against his own citizens. He waged a psychological campaign that was designed to poison the public and to silence the families’ outcry.

Looking ahead: Israel is due to hold a general election by 27 October 2026. However, the election could be brought forward due to difficulties surrounding the budget and legislation on Haredi draft exemptions. There are also rumours circulating that Netanyahu will dismantle his government and will call an early election.

  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s party, Likud, is leading in the polls, but his governing coalition is projected to fall short of an overall majority.
  • In parallel, Prime Minister Netanyahu continues to appear in court facing trial on corruption charges. At the end of November, he requested a pardon from President Isaac Herzog, which is currently under consideration.

December 10, 2025

Search for remains of last hostage on hold as storm hits coast

Heavy winds and rain at the beach in the southern Israeli city of Ashdod, December 10, 2025.
Heavy winds and rain at the beach in the southern Israeli city of Ashdod, December 10, 2025. Photo by Flash90 *** Local Caption *** רוח חוף ים סערה סופה גשם חורף מזג אוויר

What’s happened: The ongoing search for the body of Ran Gvili, the last remaining hostage from the October 7 massacre not repatriated to Israel for burial, has been temporarily called off due to an impending large storm.

  • Storm Byron, named by the new Southeast Mediterranean convention instituted by Greece, Israel, and Cyprus five years ago, is expected to bring harsh weather to Israel and the Palestinian territories.
  • In preparation, COGAT has confirmed that almost 270,000 tents and tarpaulins have entered Gaza in recent weeks along with fuel, 5,600 tons of medical supplies and over 1,500 trucks of blankets and winter clothes.
  • In addition, since the ceasefire went into effect, over 18,000 food trucks have entered Gaza, with about 20% of those coming from the UN. According to the most updated figures, between 600 and 800 trucks carrying humanitarian goods enter every day.
  • The New York Post reported yesterday on a video that had surfaced on social media from the summer showing several tons of baby formula and nutritional shakes meant for kids being hidden in an underground Hamas facility. According to the report, the video was taken during the late summer weeks when global headlines were dominated by an alleged famine in Gaza. The video was distributed by a Ahmed Fouad Alkhatib, a Gaza native and anti-Hamas activist, who accused Hamas of attempting to starve its own populace in an attempt to put pressure on Israel.
  • Yesterday at Ben Gurion Airport, a small ceremony was held to mark the repatriation of the body of Sudthisak Rinthalak, a citizen of Thailand who was abducted and murdered in the October 7 attack and whose body was returned to Israel last week.
  • Israel is set to reopen the Allenby Crossing today. The crossing is one of only three crossings between territory under Israeli control and Jordan, and the only one connecting the West Bank to Jordan. Israel closed the crossing in September following a deadly attack in which a Jordanian citizen driving a truck with aid for Gaza opened fire on Israelis, killing two security personnel. Shortly after the incident, Israel had the crossing reopened for passenger traffic, but it has been closed for  trucks for the past three months.

Context: President Trump has indicated that he would like to announce the conclusion of Phase One of the ceasefire and the beginning of Phase Two.

  • Israeli officials are hesitant to accede to this without first achieving the return of the last hostage to Israel. There is fear in Israel that even a small compromise on this very clear and very measurable ceasefire condition will be a repeat of the mistakes made in previous ceasefires in Gaza and Lebanon, where global pressure on Israel not to insist on full implementation ended up allowing terrorist organisations to build up and thrive on its borders.
  • Israeli officials have speculated that Hamas is deliberately delaying the repatriation of Gvili’s body in order to drag out the first stage of the ceasefire, which has allowed Hamas to reestablish and consolidate its hold on half of the Gaza Strip, and avoid entering the second stage, which could see it forced to disarm.
  • Both the US and Israel would like to see a forceful mandate for the International Stabilisation Force, yet to be formed, which will enforce Phase Two of the ceasefire agreement. It remains unclear whether the mandate will fall under Chapter VI or VII of the UN Charter. Both Israel and the US are keen on the latter which provides the legitimate use of force for enforcement purposes. Israel is wary of repeating the failure of UNIFIL in Lebanon that is only mandated to carry arms for self defence under Chapter VI. Chapter VII is crucial if the mission is to include disarming Hamas. In any event there are still no countries prepared to send troops for such a mission, apart from Turkey that has been vetoed by Israel.
  • Parallel to that, Israel has acceded to a US request to map out several “green zones” inside the part of the Gaza Strip held by the IDF as places for temporary housing for Gazans. Preliminary infrastructure work has been done in these zones so that trailer homes and schools can be connected to water and sewage lines. Only families vetted to ensure that they have no arms and no connection to Hamas will be allowed to enter the green zones, and this will only begin once the second phase of the ceasefire has formally begun.
  • Israel Hayom reports that the Israeli Government, contrary to its publicly stated position, conveyed to the Palestinian Authority a limited willingness to accept the “pathway to a Palestinian state” mooted in Trump’s 20-point plan which was the basis of the Gaza ceasefire, but only if the Palestinian Authority accepted two conditions: a definitive end to the pay-for-slay programme for terrorists in Israeli prisons and an end to UNRWA activity in both the West Bank and Gaza. The Palestinians, according to the report, rejected both conditions.
  • Former head of the Shin Bet Ronen Bar has spoken publicly for the first time since leaving his role. He called once more for the formation of a State Commission of Inquiry to investigate the failures leading up to the October 7 attack. He made the statement, widely interpreted in Israeli media as a swipe at Prime Minister Netanyahu’s attempt to craft a bespoke inquiry outside the framework of the Commission of Inquiries Law. He noted, fifteen State Commissions of Inquiry have been convened under the rubric of this law, and they have investigated matters including Israel’s failure to prepare for the Yom Kippur War, the massacre of Palestinians in two Lebanese Refugee Camps during the First Lebanon War, the assassination of Prime Minister Rabin, and the October 2000 riots.
  • Prime Minister Netanyahu has sought to sidestep a State Commission of Inquiry by appointing a ministerial committee to convene a special governmental commission of inquiry, whose mandate would include investigating the role of the Supreme Court, the media, and anti-government protesters in the lead-up to the October 7 massacre.

Looking ahead: The US administration is determined to see diplomatic progress on Gaza, as well as with Syria and Egypt, and may be willing to apply moderate pressure to achieve this.

  • President Trump appears eager to announce some kind of positive development on at least one at his scheduled meeting with Prime Minister Netanyahu on December 29, and ideally all three.

December 9, 2025

Israeli cabinet approves state budget

Israeli cabinet approves state budget, December 5, 2025.
Israeli cabinet approves state budget, December 5, 2025. Photo credit: Kobi Gideon (GPO)

What’s happened: On Friday the cabinet approved the state budget for the upcoming year.

  • Prime Minister Netanyahu described it as a “responsible, balanced budget,” that “meets all the security needs of the State of Israel.”
  • Beyond the military achievements over the last year, Netanyahu also highlighted the country’s economic strength, “Investments are flowing and will continue to flow. The stock market is breaking records. The shekel has strengthened. Interest rates have dropped and unemployment is at a low. And all this during a war. No one believed this either, but we believed, you believed, Minister of Finance, and we did it together.”
  • “In the current budget, we intend to lower taxes, including income tax. We also intend to reduce regulation and streamline our governmental systems.” According to Netanyahu, the “most important thing in this budget is aid and grants for IDF soldiers in the standing army and in the reserves, and for their families, because they deserve it. We will grant them all the support they need, a framework we have already built, and it will grow even larger. Together, we are presenting a good budget for the State of Israel, and I am certain that this budget will pass.”
  • The proposed budget amounts to 662 billion shekels (about £154 billion) and would leave the government with an operating deficit of 3.9 per cent of GDP.
  • On Monday, Netanyahu was forced to attend a Knesset session triggered by 40 signatures from the opposition. Addressing the plenary, Netanyahu said that the government was also on the verge of completing the first stage a bill which would regulate draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox public.
  • Leader of the Opposition Lapid blasted the Government for “approving a budget of corruption and draft-dodging.”
  • Naftali Bennett, widely seen as a leading contender to replace Netanyahu as prime minister in the next election derided the budget as a “protection” racket of a Government“extorted by draft-dodgers, and bankrupting those who serve.”

Context: The process of cabinet approval of a government budget proposal was, in comparison to most years in Israel, unusually late and remarkably drama-free.

  • Normally, the government finishes its proposal by July, and from there the budget moves to parliament. This year, Prime Minister Netanyahu preferred to hold off until after the fighting in Gaza (and elsewhere) ended before bringing a detailed proposal for the defence budget.
  • There was a political calculation too. The unresolved dispute over the ultra-Orthodox draft exemption legislation threatened to topple the government over the past year and trigger early elections, and as long as that threat hovered over the horizon, there was little to be gained publicising potentially unpopular tax increases and spending cuts that might never have been implemented anyway.
  • The draft dispute is also a principal reason why the budget resolution in cabinet was significantly less contentious than in previous years. The ultra-Orthodox representatives are currently not part of the cabinet as part of their pressure campaign on the draft issue, although they are not voting with the opposition.
  • Crucially in order to pass the budget in parliament the government needs the ultra-Orthodox MKs in order to have a majority. They will only support the budget if they also receive the legislation over military exemption that they are pursuing.
  • The biggest disagreement in the lead-up to Friday’s budget vote was regarding the defence budget. The initial gaps were enormous, with the Defence Ministry asking for 140 billion shekels (£33 billion) and the Treasury only granting 90 billion (around £21 billion). A revised downward estimate of reserve army service, a large drain on the defence budget since the October 7 war broke out, paved the way for a compromise on the figure of 112 billion shekels (£26 billion).
  • Overall, this year’s budget has less dramatic  reforms than last year’s. Income tax brackets are once more inflation-linked – after having been frozen last year which lead to higher tax rates for middle class families.
  • VAT exemptions on personal imports were raised, despite industry opposition to the measure. A dramatic reduction in dairy import tariffs was included in the budget proposal despite fierce opposition from local dairy farmers.
  • On the other hand, the Treasury proposal to end the VAT exemption on tourism-related services, especially hotels, was successfully blocked following pressure from hoteliers. This policy has featured in many budget proposals over the years and never passed, though this year it survived to a very late stage before being abandoned.
  • There are many sectors that face economic hardships due to the war, including reservists and those evacuated from their homes in the north and south. There is also an understanding that those who survived the attacks, as well as those wounded and bereaved, all require and deserve full rehabilitation.
  • The Treasury was expected to propose shutting down at least five and possibly more Government ministries seen as superfluous. Expectations were that such a proposal would ultimately be whittled down or dropped entirely, but in the end the Treasury did not even include this measure as a proposal at all.
  • The budget proposal also included what in Israel are indelicately referred to as “coalition funds,” last-minute earmarks for narrow sectoral interests. The total of these earmarks was 5.2 billion shekels, and they went almost entirely to religious institutions, with the majority of the money directed toward West Bank settlements.

Looking ahead: Historically, no Israeli government has ever successfully passed a budget in an election year.    

  • The budget now moves to its first plenary reading in the Knesset and then to parliamentary committee discussions. By law, the Knesset has until March 31 to pass a budget. Failure to do so would automatically dissolve parliament and lead to elections within three months.
  • Elections are currently scheduled for October 2026, so even in the event that a budget is not passed, this would only move the next election up by four months.

December 1, 2025

Prime Minister Netanyahu requests a pardon

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives to the courtroom at the Distrcit court in Tel Aviv, before the start of his testimony in the trial against him, October 28, 2025.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arrives to the courtroom at the Distrcit court in Tel Aviv, before the start of his testimony in the trial against him, October 28, 2025. Photo by Miriam Alster/Flash90

What’s happened: Prime Minister Netanyahu has submitted a formal request for a pardon to President Herzog.

  • The full 111 page document was submitted to the Legal Department of the Office of the President by the Prime Minister’s lawyer, Amit Hadad.
  • In parallel, Prime Minister Netanyahu released a video explaining the move. Addressing the citizens of Israel, Netanyahu argued that, “nearly a decade has passed since the investigations into my case  begun. My trial has been ongoing for nearly six years, and is expected to continue for many more years. As more exonerating testimony and evidence which have completely refuted the false allegations against me have come to light in court, and as it has become clearer that the evidentiary foundation against me was built amid the commission of serious crimes, my personal interest was and has remained to continue with this process until its end, until my full acquittal on all counts. But the security and political reality, the national interest, demand otherwise. The State of Israel faces tremendous challenges alongside tremendous opportunities. To repel the threats [and] to seize the opportunities, national unity is essential.”
  • “The ongoing trial has torn us apart from within, has inspired fierce disagreements [and] has deepened divisions. I am sure, like many other Israelis, that the immediate end of the trial will greatly help lower the flames and will promote the broad reconciliation that our country so badly needs. I deliberated extensively on this issue, but recent events have tipped the scales. Due to a decision made by the judicial panel that presides over the case, I am obliged to testify three times a week. Three times a week. That is an impossible demand that isn’t made of any other Israeli citizen.
  • “Furthermore, I also considered President Trump’s repeated requests to Israel’s president. President Trump called for an immediate end to the trial so that I might be able, alongside him, to advance with redoubled efforts the vital interests shared by Israel and the United States in a time window that is unlikely ever to reappear.
  • “Dear citizens of Israel, time after time, I have been elected in democratic elections and I have received your confidence to continue to serve as the prime minister of Israel, first and foremost so as to achieve these historic goals. For these reasons, my attorneys submitted a request for a pardon today to the president. I expect everyone who has the country’s best interests at heart to support this step.”

Context: Upon receiving the request the President noted that he is aware that this is “an extraordinary request which carries with it significant implications,” adding, “after receiving all of the relevant opinions, the President will responsibly and sincerely consider the request.”

  • Requesting a pardon before being sentenced and without admitting guilt is completely unprecedented in the Israeli system.
  • The trial began in May 2020 and could run on for several more years. It is focused on three separate cases:
    • In “Case 1,000” Netanyahu is charged with fraud and breach of trust and is alleged to have received illegal gifts from businessman Arnon Milchan, worth up to £300,000, in return for allegedly acting in Milchan’s interest in a deal to sell an Israeli TV Channel (Channel 10) as well as allegedly helping him get a US visa, after Milchan’s was rescinded. Netanyahu is also alleged to have pursued a deal linked to Indian businessman Ratan Tata, who was Milchan’s business partner, and allegedly supported a law to extend tax breaks given to Israelis returning to live in the country after ten years (such as Milchan).
    • In “Case 2,000” Netanyahu is charged with fraud and breach of trust and is alleged to have worked on a deal with Yediot Ahronot owner Arnon “Noni” Mozes to get better media coverage by offering to restrict circulation of rival newspaper Israel Hayom, which was financed by US-based Netanyahu supporter Sheldon Adelson. The indictment said that Netanyahu and Mozes “recognised that the one had the ability to promote the other’s interest” in the run-up to the 2015 elections and discussed such possibilities. Netanyahu claims he was not serious about the agreement and never intended to implement the deal.
    • In “Case 4,000” Netanyahu is charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust and is alleged to have promoted regulatory decisions that benefited Shaul Elovitch, the controlling shareholder in the Bezeq telecom giant, in exchange for positive coverage from the Elovitch-owned Walla news site. The indictment says the relationship between Netanyahu and Elovitch was “based on give and take,” and the Prime Minister’s actions benefiting Elovitch netted the businessman benefits to the tune of some NIS 1.8 billion ($500 million) in the period 2012-2017. In exchange, Elovitch’s Walla news site “published your political messages that you wished to convey to the public.”
  • The responses to the appeal for a pardon were predictably partisan. Leader of the Opposition Lapid said, “I say to President Herzog: You can’t grant Netanyahu a pardon without him admitting guilt, expressing remorse and immediately retiring from political life.”
  • Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said, “In order to rescue Israel from the chaos, I will support a binding arrangement that includes a respectful retirement from political life alongside an end of the trial. That way, we can let it go, unite, and rebuild the country together.”  
  • Leader of the Democrats Yair Golan said, “Netanyahu wants a pardon? Admit guilt. Express remorse and resign. This is the only way for unity for the nation.”
  • Leader of Yisrael Beiteinu Avigdor Lieberman said, “Five minutes ago there was a war here, and the draft-dodging bill and two hostages who aren’t back and the economy is collapsing, and food prices are sky-high. And what about the whitewash commission of inquiry they’re setting up? Everything has fallen apart. We mustn’t allow him to control the public conversation. We have to keep our eye on the ball.”
  • Coalition Chairman MK Ofir Katz (Likud) said, “The prime minister’s decision to request a pardon is an act of great magnanimity. It’s clear to everyone that the most political trial is collapsing, and the prime minister could easily have proven his innocence in this corrupt witch hunt. But for the sake of healing the country and reconciliation, he is choosing this path. A true leader who always puts the good of the country before his personal interests.” He also received support from his coalition partners.
  • There is speculation that President Herzog could present several conditions in order to receive a pardon: To step down as prime minister, possibly with the option of being re-elected in new elections; and to call an end to all the legislation around judicial reform.
  • Veteran commentator Nahum Barnea writing in Yediot Ahronot lays out three possible responses by the President:
    • “The first is to say that a pardon is out of the question since the conditions stipulated by law haven’t been met.”
    • “The second is to give Netanyahu everything he has demanded and to pray that the High Court of Justice doesn’t strike down the pardon.”
    • “The third is to insist on Netanyahu’s retirement in return for a pardon; to insist that the defendant acknowledge his guilt.”
  • In the past there were discussions of a plea bargain that would see charges of bribery being dropped, an admission of guilt on the lesser charges, evading prison, but retiring from politics.    
  • The issue has long divided Israeli society. In the latest polling on Kan News, 38 per cent support a pardon, with 43 per cent opposed.

Looking ahead: The request has now been relayed to the Pardons Department in the Ministry of Justice which will gather the opinions of all the relevant authorities in the Ministry of Justice.

  • The next stage will include a review by the Legal Advisor in the Office of the President and her team to formulate an additional opinion for the President.
  • The President released a guide to explain for the full legal process ahead.
  • Prime Minister Netanyahu’s trial resumed this morning. None of the parties made any mention of his request for clemency from President Herzog. Netanyahu filed a motion asking the court to cancel his court appearance tomorrow, citing state needs. The judges have not yet ruled on his motion.

November 27, 2025

Fateful days ahead for the Israeli government

People react outside a court hearing on petitions against the appointment of retired judge Yosef Ben-Hamo, at the Supreme Court in Jerusalem, November 27, 2025.
People react outside a court hearing on petitions against the appointment of retired judge Yosef Ben-Hamo, at the Supreme Court in Jerusalem, November 27, 2025. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** טלי גוטליב יוסף בן חמו עתירות דיון בית משפט עליון

What’s happened: Three parallel dramas are unfolding in Israeli domestic politics, and all three function indirectly as holdovers of the bitter divisions that predate the October 7 massacre and subsequent war.

  • Reports suggest Prime Minister Netanyahu has decided to advance controversial legislation formalising draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox minority in Israel in the coming weeks. The logic being that this is the only way to prevent early elections (an option he was reportedly considering in recent weeks) from being called now, as well as the only way to hold onto his ultra-Orthodox partners after the next election.
  • Netanyahu could face opposition  within his own ruling Likud party, with suggestions that as many as five coalition MK’s oppose the bill being drafted by Netanyahu’s ally Boaz Bismuth, the MK who replaced Yuli Edelstein as chair of the Knesset’s Foreign and Defence Committee.
  • The issue of ultra-Orthodox induction into the army has been a long term challenge. For the prime minister it pits his commitment to his ultra-Orthodox allies to protect and perpetuate the religious studies of ultra-Orthodox men against the popular sentiment striving for a more equal sharing of the burden. The issue has been further exacerbated following the oversized sacrifices made by reservists over the last two years.
  • There is continued and unusual public tension between the IDF Chief OF Staff Zamir and Defence Minister Katz along with other senior government ministers.
  • Comments made yesterday by Zamir were widely interpreted as criticism of the Government. Speaking at the annual ceremony held in honour of Israel’s first Prime Minister David Ben Gurion (which, unusually, was not attended by the Prime Minister), Zamir said that “what is needed is courageous, purposeful, transformative leadership. Leadership that both recognises failure and dares to drive change. Not leadership that frightens and stifles, but leadership that uplifts — leadership with inspiration. Not leadership that evades, but one that looks truth in the eye and sets a new direction.”
  • Meanwhile this morning the Supreme Court ruled against Justice Minister Levin in his effort to handpick a retired judge of his liking to lead the investigation into malfeasance by the IDF Advocate General. The Court ruled that his choice did not meet the requirements stipulated for the investigation.
  • The entire affair, involving abuse of Hamas affiliated prisoners by IDF reservists, a leak of an incriminating video, the MAG lying to the Supreme Court about the source of the leak. The scandal pits coalition  politicians against the legal establishment along similar lines over the controversial judicial reform that was prevalent in the months before October 7, and has been the source of impassioned public disagreement in Israel.

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