THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Jun 25, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support for Fantasy Sports and Betting Enthusiasts.
back  
topic
Times Of Israel
Times Of Israel
3 Jan 2025


NextImg:Trump taps ex-State Department spokeswoman Ortagus as deputy Mideast envoy

The Times of Israel is liveblogging Saturday’s events as they happen.

‘Let’s see what happens’: Trump taps ex-State Dept. spokeswoman Ortagus as deputy Mideast envoy

US State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus speaks at a news conference at the State Department in Washington, June 17, 2019. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
US State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus speaks at a news conference at the State Department in Washington, June 17, 2019. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

US President-elect Donald Trump announces his decision to appoint his former State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus as his deputy Mideast envoy.

Ortagus will work under Steve Witkoff, who was one of the first appointments Trump made. Both of them are Jewish.

Trump is far from effusive in his Truth Social post announcing the decision.

Ortagus “fought me for three years, but hopefully has learned her lesson,” he says. He doesn’t get into specifics, but Ortagus did back Nikki Haley’s Republican presidential run against Trump in the previous election.

“These things usually don’t work out, but she has strong Republican support, and I’m not doing this for me, I’m doing it for them. Let’s see what happens.”

“She will hopefully be an asset to Steve, a great leader and talent, as we seek to bring calm and prosperity to a very troubled region. I expect great results, and soon!” he adds.

Palestinians say seven wounded in IDF raid of West Bank’s Balata refugee camp

Palestinian officials say Israeli forces raided a refugee camp in the West Bank earlier this evening, wounding seven people with gunfire in the latest violence to hit the territory.

Israeli forces raided the Balata camp near the main northern city of Nablus late on Friday triggering clashes, the Palestinian Red Crescent said.

“Seven people have been injured by gunfire during clashes in Balata camp, including two in serious condition with chest wounds,” it says in a statement.

The Israeli military says it is checking reports regarding the raid.

The official Palestinian news agency, Wafa, gives the same casualty toll.

“The occupation forces raided the area of Balata camp .. and deployed snipers on rooftops of nearby buildings,” Wafa reports.

State Department approves potential sale of lightweight torpedoes to Saudi Arabia, Pentagon says

The US State Department has approved the potential sale to Saudi Arabia of 20 lightweight torpedoes and related equipment, the Pentagon says.

In total the deals could amount to as much as $78.5 million. The principal contractor would be RTX.N.

Poll: Government supporters favor Levin to succeed Netanyahu atop Likud; most Israelis think PM should fire Ben Gvir

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with Justice Minister Yariv Levin (R) at the Knesset on June 7, 2023. (Oren Ben Hakoon/Flash90)
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks with Justice Minister Yariv Levin (R) at the Knesset on June 7, 2023. (Oren Ben Hakoon/Flash90)

Justice Minister Yariv Levin is the most popular candidate among supporters of the government to succeed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at the helm of the Likud party, a Channel 12 survey finds. Among all respondents, former defense minister Yoav Gallant is the preferred option.

The poll also finds that a majority of the public thinks Netanyahu should fire National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, whose revolt against a crucial coalition budget bill this week forced the 75-year-old premier to come to the Knesset to vote for the bill, leaving the hospital where he was recovering from prostate surgery. Ben Gvir has been voting against the coalition over his demand for a larger budget for the police force, which he oversees as national security minister.

Meanwhile, continuing the trend of previous weeks, the poll finds Netanyahu is seen as a better fit for the role of premier than all major rivals but one — former prime minister Naftali Bennett, whose lead over Netanyahu is slimmer than it was in recent polls. A majority of respondents also supported holding snap elections.

Asked who should succeed Netanyahu atop Likud, Levin, architect of the government’s contentious plan to overhaul the judiciary, receives the support of 6% of all respondents, including 14% of those who support the government. Gallant, who resigned from the Knesset this week over clashes with Netanyahu regarding Israel’s strategy in Gaza and the ultra-Orthodox draft exemption bill, is supported by 15% of all respondents, including 7% of government supporters.

Meanwhile, Economy Minister Nir Barkat is supported by 9% of all respondents, including 11% of pro-government respondents; Defense Minister Israel Katz is supported by 6% of all respondents, including 10% of government supporters; Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar, who returned to the Likud this week four years after forming the breakaway New Hope party, is supported by 5% of all respondents, including 5% of government supporters; Yuli Edelstein, chair of the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee who, like Gallant, has expressed reservations about the military draft law, is supported by 4% of all respondents, including 3% of government supporters; Agriculture Minister Avi Dichter is supported by 3% of all respondents, including 3% of government supporters; Energy Minister Eli Cohen is supported by 2% of all respondents, including 3% of government supporters; Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana is supported by 1% of all respondents, including 2% of government supporters; and Transportation Minister Miri Regev receives 0% support from pro- and anti-government respondents alike.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (center) interacts with National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir (right) in the Knesset on December 31, 2024. Netanyahu left the hospital less than two days after prostate surgery to vote on a budget law that Ben Gvir tried in vain to defeat. (Chaim Goldberg / Flash 90)

Twenty-one percent of respondents, including 16% of government supporters, say they want someone other than the above politicians to lead the Likud post-Netanyahu; and 28%, including 26% of government supporters, say they don’t know.

Asked what motivated Ben Gvir’s vote against the government this week, 60% of respondents say the vote was politically motivated, 21% say it was professionally motivated and 19% say they don’t know.

Fifty-nine percent say Netanyahu should fire Ben Gvir over his conduct, while 24% disagree and 17% say they don’t know. Among government supporters, the result was roughly tied, with 38% saying Netanyahu should fire Ben Gvir, 38% saying he shouldn’t and 21% saying they don’t know.

The survey also finds Netanyahu holding on to his lead over most rival contenders for the premiership.

In a match-up with Opposition Chief Yair Lapid, 40% say they prefer Netanyahu for the role, as opposed to 24% who prefer Lapid, while 32% say neither and 4% say they don’t know. Against National Unity chief Benny Gantz, Netanyahu receives 38% support as opposed to Gantz’s 28%, while 29% say neither and 5% say they don’t know.

(L to R) Benjamin Netanyahu and Naftali Bennett attend the funeral of Israeli Orthodox Jewish rabbi Haim Drukman, at Merkaz Shapira near Kiryat Malachi on December 26, 2022 (Gil Cohen-Magen / AFP)

By contrast, Bennett inches past Netanyahu, scoring 37% support to the incumbent’s 36%, while 22% say neither and 5% say they don’t know.

Israel’s next election is set for October 2026, but critics of the government have demanded to move it up, arguing that the government must re-seek its public mandate after failing to prevent thousands of Hamas-led terrorists from storming southern Israel on October 7, 2023, to kill some 1,200 people and take 251 hostages, sparking the war in Gaza.

Asked when they think the next election should take election, 55% of respondents to the Channel 12 poll say the vote should “as soon as possible,” while 39% say it should be held on its scheduled date and 6% say they don’t know.

The poll was conducted by Mano Geva’s Midgam polling company in cooperation with the iPanel online research firm. Channel 12 does not provide a sample size or margin of error.

Poll: 47% oppose draft law, majority thinks it won’t lead ultra-Orthodox to serve

Forty-seven percent of respondents to a Channel 12 poll say they oppose the government’s new draft law, which will formalize the exemption from military service for thousands of ultra-Orthodox yeshiva students.

Just 19% of respondents support the bill, while 13% say they have no opinion and 21% say they haven’t heard of the law.

Asked whether they think ultra-Orthodox will serve in the army as a result of the law, 54% say no, 20% say yes and 26% say they don’t know.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ultra-Orthodox coalition partners have threatened to topple the government if it doesn’t pass the draft law. Former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, whom Netanyahu fired in November in part over the ex-general’s opposition to the law, announced this week that he would resign from the Knesset in protest over the bill.

Asked whom they trust more to cater to the nation’s interests, Netanyahu or Gallant, 41% of respondents to the Channel 12 survey say Gallant, as opposed to 33% who say Netanyahu. Another 19% say neither, and 7% say they don’t know.

The poll was conducted by Mano Geva’s Midgam polling company in cooperation with the iPanel online research firm. Channel 12 does not provide a sample size or margin of error.