Netanyahu Seeks ‘Extraordinary’ Pardon Amid Corruption Trial
Israeli PM Netanyahu seeks 'extraordinary' pardon amid corruption trial, following U.S. President Trump's plea to President Herzog. #NetanyahuPardon




























Israeli PM Netanyahu seeks 'extraordinary' pardon amid corruption trial, following U.S. President Trump's plea to President Herzog. #NetanyahuPardon
India and Israel strengthen strategic partnership with Minister Goyal's visit, boosting investments and innovation. Talks resume for Free Trade Agreement.
Israeli PM Netanyahu seeks 'extraordinary' pardon amid corruption trial, following U.S. President Trump's plea to President Herzog. #NetanyahuPardon
By Pesach Benson • November 30, 2025
Jerusalem, 30 November, 2025 (TPS-IL) — In an unprecedented move, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu submitted an “extraordinary” pardon request to President Isaac Herzog, the president’s office announced on Sunday. The move comes on the heels of U.S. President Donald Trump’s unprecedented letter urging Herzog to grant clemency to Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption.
The 111-page application — one letter signed by Netanyahu and a second, more detailed letter, signed by his attorney, Amit Hadad — asked Herzog to end the corruption trial of Netanyahu, saying it hampers his ability to lead the country and is in the public interest.
“Granting this request will allow the prime minister to devote all of his time, abilities, and energy to advancing Israel in these critical times,” wrote Hadad, “and to deal with the challenges and opportunities that lie before it. In addition, granting the request will help mend rifts between different sectors of the public, open the door to lowering the intensity of tensions, all for the purpose of strengthening the country’s national resilience.”
In response to Trump’s request in mid-November, Herzog responded that no pardon could be considered unless Netanyahu first formally admits guilt and requests clemency. Netanyahu has previously ruled out requesting clemency if it means admitting guilt. His application did not contain an admission of guilt.
The application also argued that Herzog has the authority to grant clemency, even before a conviction.
“The President’s Office notes that this is an extraordinary pardon request with significant implications. After receiving all the opinions, the President of the State will consider it responsibly and seriously,” Herzog’s office said after receiving Netanyahu’s request.
“In light of the importance of the extraordinary request and its implications, the documents are hereby distributed to the public,” the announcement added.
Netanyahu’s request was also forwarded to the Justice Ministry’s Pardons Department at the Ministry of Justice, which will also gather the relevant opinions from within the ministry in preparation for a legal opinion to be presented to Herzog.
Netanyahu faces charges of fraud, accepting bribes, and breach of trust stemming from three separate police investigations. He denies all wrongdoing.
In the case known as the “Bezeq Affair,” Netanyahu, while serving as communications minister, is accused of granting regulatory benefits to the Bezeq telecom giant. In return, Bezeq’s majority shareholder, Shaul Elovitch, allegedly provided Netanyahu with favorable coverage on the Walla news site, which he owned.
In the second investigation, known as the “Yediot Affair,” Netanyahu allegedly helped *Yediot Aharonot* publisher Arnon Mozes by advancing regulations on newspaper distribution to Mozes’s advantage. In exchange, Mozes is accused of offering Netanyahu favorable coverage.
In a separate investigation known as the “Gifts Affair,” Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, are accused of accepting $200,000 in gifts from Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan in exchange for assistance with a U.S. visa and changes to tax provisions benefiting Milchan. This case is widely regarded as the most serious one against Netanyahu.
Netanyahu denies all wrongdoing and has insisted in the past that the trial would not interfere with his public responsibilities.
No serving Israeli Prime Minister has ever been indicted on criminal charges. Ehud Olmert stepped down in 2008 ahead of his own indictment for corruption. Olmert was eventually convicted and served two-thirds of a 27-month prison sentence.
Lapid pushes for Knesset approval of Trump's Gaza peace plan, challenging Netanyahu coalition. Israeli politics at a crossroads.
By Pesach Benson • November 25, 2025
Jerusalem, 25 November, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Opposition leader Yair Lapid announced on Tuesday that he will bring a motion to the Knesset next week calling for Israel to adopt U.S. President Donald Trump’s 20-point Gaza peace plan, a move designed to support Washington while putting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition on the spot.
“The entire Israeli people are grateful to President Trump for leading a courageous deal to free the hostages. We support him and strengthen his hand in efforts to implement the steps of the plan. I expect all parties to vote in favor of the president’s plan,” Lapid said.
The plan lays out a phased strategy to end the conflict, including the return of all hostages—living and deceased—within 72 hours of agreement implementation. It envisions a temporary, technocratic Palestinian committee to manage day-to-day affairs in Gaza under the oversight of a new international body, the “Peace Council.” The council would coordinate redevelopment and financing until the Palestinian Authority completes its reform program and can safely resume governance.
Although Trump’s plan frames Palestinian statehood as a distant possibility contingent on reforms and security guarantees, it still explicitly acknowledges “a credible pathway to self-determination and a Palestinian state.” Netanyahu and many coalition members have consistently opposed any notion of a Palestinian state, viewing it as incompatible with Israel’s long-term security and territorial goals.
The U.S. plan also lays the groundwork for the eventual return of the Palestinian Authority to governing Gaza. Many coalition ministers are skeptical or outright opposed to empowering the P.A.
“This is a chance to strengthen Trump’s hand and support a clear framework for ending the conflict,” Lapid said. “It is also a test of whether the government is ready to stand with Israel’s interests — or with political expediency.”
It is uncertain whether Lapid’s motion will pass, which could embarrass Netanyahu.
After the United Nations Security Council adopted the Trump plan, Netanyahu called the plan “a framework that will lead to peace and prosperity because it insists upon full demilitarization, disarmament, and the deradicalization of Gaza.”
Around 1,200 people were killed and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken captive by Hamas during the October 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. The bodies of two Israelis and one Thai national are still held in Gaza.
Netanyahu condemns Hamas, Islamic Jihad over delay in returning hostage’s body, violating agreements. Israel demands immediate return. #NetanyahuSlams
By Pesach Benson • November 25, 2025
Jerusalem, 25 November, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday condemned what he called an unacceptable delay by Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad in returning the body of a hostage found in central Gaza, saying the hold-up violates existing understandings.
“In light of the Islamic Jihad’s announcement regarding the location of findings related to a deceased hostage, Israel views with severity the delay in their immediate transfer into its hands,” Netanyahu’s office said. “This constitutes a further violation of the agreement. Israel demands the immediate return of the three deceased hostages still being held in the Gaza Strip.”
More than 24 hours have passed since Islamic Jihad confirmed Al Jazeera’s report that the body of a hostage was discovered near Nuseirat on Monday.
Hamas typically announces plans to transfer recovered remains, even when they are held by Islamic Jihad. However, Hamas has not issued any statement, and Islamic Jihad has given no indication it intends to hand over the body. Neither terror group has been in touch with the International Red Cross, which transfers remains between the terror groups and the Israel Defense Forces.
Around 1,200 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken captive by Hamas during the October 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. The bodies of two Israelis — Dror Or and Master Sgt. Ran Gvili — and Thai national Sudthisak Rinthalak are still in Gaza.
Cabinet Reshuffle Assigns Yariv Levin Four Government Ministries in Israel. Orthodox parties quit coalition, leaving posts vacant. Levin to take on additional
By Pesach Benson • November 23, 2025
Jerusalem, 23 November, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Israel’s government on Sunday approved a series of temporary ministerial appointments to fill posts left vacant after the country’s Orthodox parties quit the coalition.
Justice Minister Yariv Levin will assume responsibility for the Labor, Religious Services and Jerusalem ministries. Levin, who is already serving as Interior Minister, will hand that portfolio to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on an interim basis.
While the Orthodox United Torah Judaism and Shas parties are no longer part of the government, they have agreed to support the Cabinet reshuffle.
The Knesset is scheduled to vote on the arrangement on Monday.
Levin is not the only minister taking on multiple roles. Haim Katz currently leads the Construction and Housing, Tourism, Health and Welfare ministries, reflecting the government’s continued reliance on overlapping appointments during a period of political flux.
Legislation currently in the Knesset’s Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee seeks to formalize Orthodox community exemptions from the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). Committee chairman Boaz Bismuth has indicated that the revised draft is expected to continue exempting full-time yeshiva students from military service for the foreseeable future.
The military began making plans to draft yeshiva students after Israel’s High Court of Justice ruled in 2024 that exemptions for the Haredi community were illegal.
Haredi Orthodox men in Israel are generally exempt from mandatory military service if they study full-time in religious seminaries, known as yeshivot. The issue has long divided Israeli society and remains politically sensitive, especially during wartime. Shas and UTJ insist on preserving these exemptions as a matter of religious principle and community identity.
However, public opposition has grown. After two years of war, many Israelis view the policy as unequal.
Military service is compulsory for all Israeli citizens. However, Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, and the country’s leading rabbis agreed to a status quo that deferred military service for Haredi men studying in yeshivot, or religious institutions. At the time, no more than several hundred men were studying in yeshivot.
India and Israel strengthen strategic partnership with Minister Goyal's visit, boosting investments and innovation. Talks resume for Free Trade Agreement.
By Pesach Benson • November 23, 2025
Jerusalem, 23 November, 2025 (TPS-IL) — India’s Minister of commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal concluded a three-day visit to Israel on Sunday with meetings with both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Isaac Herzog.
“Israel and India are strengthening our strategic partnership, more investments, more innovation, and a strong economic corridor from India through Israel to Europe. Together we are building economic power,” Netanyahu tweeted afterwards.
Goyal briefed Netanyahu on the outcomes of the India-Israel Business Forum and CEOs Forum, which brought more than 60 Indian business leaders to Israel. The two also discussed negotiations for a Free Trade Agreement, which were officially resumed on Thursday with the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU).
Earlier, Goyal met President Isaac Herzog, who welcomed the progress toward a deeper economic relationship. “I’m especially happy that you’re here to sign an MOU… the sky’s the limit. We have to work hard on it, but I think we are like-minded in so many things,” Herzog told Goyal. He added: “The impact of India and the affection towards India in Israel is outstanding… I think the relations are excellent, but we can even upgrade them more.”
During the meeting, Goyal conveyed “the warm greetings of the people of India” and highlighted the strong outcomes from the Business Forum and CEOs Forum, describing them as the “first big step” toward FTA talks. He emphasized India’s “robust growth story” and expanding opportunities for Israeli companies in innovation, technology, manufacturing, agriculture, and investment.
Goyal led a delegation of around 100 representatives from nearly 70 Indian companies, India’s largest ever trade delegation to Israel.
India, the world’s fifth-largest economy with a population of roughly 1.4 billion, is a strategic destination for Israeli exports. Exports of Israeli goods and services to India reached about $3.1 billion in 2024, growing 56% over four years despite regional conflicts. A free trade agreement is expected to reduce high tariffs and trade barriers while also addressing digital trade, services, intellectual property, government procurement, and other areas essential for deepening cooperation.
On Friday, Goyal met Agriculture and Food Security Minister Avi Dichter, who outlined Israel’s 25-year food-security roadmap, its advanced seed-improvement capabilities, and world-leading water-reuse technologies. A day earlier, Goyal met his Israeli counterpart, Nir Barkat, to review trade flows and identify new areas of collaboration. Goyal later posted that their discussions covered “the full spectrum of our strategic partnership… and the first big step towards FTA negotiations.”
Both countries reaffirmed their commitment to advancing FTA negotiations and accelerating cooperation in investment, technology, and industrial innovation. Bilateral trade, which stood at $200 million in 1992, reached a peak of $10.7 billion in 2022-23 (excluding defence).
Since the outbreak of the October 7 war, Israeli-Indian trade declined as airlines cut back on flights to Tel Aviv and Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen disrupted international shipping in the Red Sea.
Israel and India signed a bilateral investment agreement in September, which Israeli officials hailed as the first of its kind between India and a Western-oriented member of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
PM Netanyahu pays tribute to the late Netanya Mayor Miriam Feirberg-Ikar at the Government meeting. Honoring her legacy and commitment to the city.
At the start of the meeting, the Prime Minister and the ministers stood for a moment of silence in memory of Netanya Mayor Miriam Feirberg-Ikar, of blessed memory, who passed away last Friday.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, today (Sunday, 23 November 2025), at the start of the Government meeting [translated from Hebrew]:
“We will shorten the government meeting today so that we can attend the major event in memory of Miriam Feirberg in Netanya. Miriam was a groundbreaking leader. She was the Mayor of Netanya for almost 30 years. This is an unbelievable thing, but it is believable, because everyone who knew her knows her deep commitment to the city, her enthusiasm, her initiative, and also her ability to stand up to difficulties, including the difficulties unjustly placed upon her in a legal attack, which, fortunately, she was finally extricated from. But she stood up to it with pride.
She was also very committed, as I know, and as each of you can also attest, because every conversation with her was: ‘What can you do for Netanya? What can we do together for Netanya?’ Without exaggeration. I don’t recall a single conversation with her that didn’t include – not only didn’t include – but wasn’t guided by this endeavor. So, I request, with your permission, that we stand for a moment of silence in her memory.
We are continuing to strike terrorism on several fronts. This weekend, the IDF struck in Lebanon, and we will continue to do everything necessary to prevent Hezbollah from re-establishing its threat capability against us. This is also what we are doing in the Gaza Strip. Since the ceasefire, Hamas has not stopped violating it, and we are acting accordingly. There have been several attempts by them to infiltrate our territory beyond the yellow line and try to harm our soldiers. We have thwarted this with great force and also retaliated and exacted a very heavy price. That includes many terrorists we eliminated, and also terrorists we captured from the tunnels in Rafah.
All the talk that ‘We must receive approvals for this’ from one source or another is simply an absolute lie. We operate independently of anyone. Immediate actions to thwart attacks are taken by the IDF automatically. As for the responses, that goes through the Minister of Defense and eventually reaches me, and we decide independently of any factor, and that is how it should be. Israel is responsible for its own security.”
Amid deadly Sunni-Druze clashes near Damascus, the Israeli Defense Forces struck Syria in a warning to the extremist Islamic groups there, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Wednesday. But one Israeli Druze official told The Press Service…
Jerusalem, 30 April, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Amid deadly Sunni-Druze clashes near Damascus, the Israeli Defense Forces struck Syria in a warning to the extremist Islamic groups there, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said on Wednesday. But one Israeli Druze official told The Press Service of Israel that airstrikes would not be enough.
“The IDF carried out a warning operation and attacked an extremist group that was organizing to continue attacking the Druze population in the town of Iskhaniya, in the Damascus province of Syria,” Netanyahu’s office said.
“At the same time, a serious message was also conveyed to the Syrian regime – Israel expects it to act to prevent harm to the Druze.”
Wael Mugrabi, head of the Ein Qiniyye Local Council in the Golan Heights, told TPS-IL that only the intervention of Israeli ground forces will provide security for the Syrian Druze. Mugrabi has been lobbying Israeli officials to directly intervene in southern Syria.
“I call on the Prime Minister and demand immediate intervention to save the Druze in Syria — and for the IDF to get involved as soon as possible. I want to see the Armored Corps on the ground before this reaches us,” Mugrabi said.
“I remind you of what Julani said: ‘Our eyes are set on Jerusalem,’” Mugrabi added, referring to Syria’s Turkish-backed President Ahmed al-Sharaa. “If there is no immediate intervention — we are next.”
As Israel marked Memorial Day, Druze demonstrators in northern Israel blocked a road and burnt tires demanding government action to protect their Syrian co-religionists.
At least 12 Syrian Druze were killed in sectarian violence with Sunni gunmen in the predominantly Druze town of Jaramana near Damascus. The fighting is said to have broken out over an audio recording attributed to a local Druze cleric that Muslims said insulted Mohammed. The cleric, Marwan Kiwan, denied making the comments.
Sheikh Mowafaq Tarif, the spiritual leader of Israel’s Druze community, urged the government to intervene.
“At this moment, the eyes and hearts of the Druze community are turned toward the attacks on Druze villages around Damascus,” Tarif said during a Memorial Day address. “Israel must not stand idly by in view of what is happening at this very moment in Syria.”
Said Netanyahu’s statement, “Precisely on Memorial Day for the Fallen in Israel, when we honor the great contribution of the Druze community to Israel’s security and the memory of the Druze fallen who sacrificed their lives to defend the State of Israel – we see great importance in realizing our commitment to the Druze community in Israel and to protecting their brothers in Syria. Israel will not allow harm to the Druze community in Syria out of a deep commitment to our Druze brothers in Israel, who are connected by family and historical ties to their Druze brothers in Syria.”
The Druze trace their ancestry back to the Biblical figure Jethro, who they call Shuaib. On Friday, hundreds of Syrian Druze clerics were allowed to enter Israel to celebrate the holiday of Ziyara at the tomb of Nabi Shuaib in the Lower Galilee.
Around 40,000 Druze live in the southern Syrian provinces of Quneitra, Da’ara and Sweida under Israeli security influence.
Netanyahu has called for the demilitarization of southern Syria and the protection for its Druze community. An estimated 700,000-800,000 Druze live in Syria, mostly in southwestern areas near Israel and Jordan. They make up around four percent of the Syrian population.
Israel’s Druze community numbers 152,000. They serve in senior positions in public and military life, and the bond between Jewish and Druze soldiers is referred to as the “covenant of blood.” The Druze speak Arabic but are not Muslim and are very secretive about their religious beliefs.
The Druze living in the Galilee and Mount Carmel areas sided with the Jews in 1948 during Israel’s War of Independence, opted to be part of Israeli society and established themselves in all areas of public life.
When Israel captured the Golan Heights during the Six-Day War of 1967, the Golan Druze refused Israeli offers of citizenship, believing Syria would recapture the plateau. But attitudes have changed since the Syrian Civil War broke out in 2011.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ignited controversy during a Tuesday meeting with torchbearers ahead of Israel’s Independence Day, when he stated that “up to 24” hostages taken by Hamas in Gaza are still alive. The moment became more fraught…
Jerusalem, 29 April, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ignited controversy during a Tuesday meeting with torchbearers ahead of Israel’s Independence Day, when he stated that “up to 24” hostages taken by Hamas in Gaza are still alive. The moment became more fraught when a video released by the Prime Minister’s Office picked up on his wife, Sara, whispering “less” under her breath.
““I say ‘up to,’” Netanyahu added after his wife’s interjection, “and the rest of course, unfortunately, are not alive. And we will return them. It’s the same spirit.”
The remarks drew immediate backlash from families of hostages, who interpreted the exchange as an unofficial confirmation of additional deaths not previously disclosed.
Einav Tsengauker, mother of Matan Tsengauker, one of the hostages believed to be in Gaza, demanded clarification. “If the Prime Minister’s wife has new information about kidnapped people who were killed, I demand that she know whether my Matan is still alive or was he murdered in captivity,” she said. “You did something that will not be done—as far as all the families are concerned, it is their child that you determined was murdered in captivity, and on the eve of Memorial Day. We are fed up. We deserve different leadership.”
According to footage released by the Prime Minister’s Office, Netanyahu only mentioned the hostages at the end of the meeting and only after a note from Transportation Minister Miri Regev, who is overseeing the Independence Day ceremony. Initially, the Prime Minister focused on what he described as Israel’s recent strategic achievements in the region.
“A year ago it wasn’t yet clear, but we have changed the face of the Middle East,” Netanyahu said. “Thanks to a truly enormous life force that lies within this people, as it has come together in moments of testing.”
He went on to praise Israeli soldiers. “I call them lions. They went out and fought. Some fell, some were wounded. There’s a guy who lost three limbs—he’s holding up one hand and says: ‘I want to come back. I want to fight.’ What power this is. Something enormous.”
Netanyahu also claimed Israel had “turned the tables” on Iran and its regional proxies. “We brought Hezbollah to its knees. In effect, we brought down the Assad regime. We attacked Iran, we attacked the Houthis. We have another big mission, I’m not minimizing that, but I’m sure we can do it.”
Minister Regev later explained changes to the Independence Day ceremony in light of the war. “This year, we increased the number of summits—each torch has three, except for the beacon of the kidnapped, which has only two, symbolizing the absence of the 59 people we are still waiting for.”
Regev acknowledged the challenges of holding a celebratory event during wartime. “It’s a very, very complex thing. But we cannot let terrorist organizations win. That’s why we tried to bring together a panel that reflects the mosaic of Israeli society—people who decided, at the last minute or the first, to do something for the country.”
Independence Day begins on Wednesday at sundown.
At least 1,180 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the 59 remaining hostages, 35 are believed to be dead.
Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) chief Ronen Bar’s Monday night announcement that he will step down on June 15 drew calls from the opposition for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to do likewise.
Jerusalem, 29 April, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) chief Ronen Bar’s Monday night announcement that he will step down on June 15 drew calls from the opposition for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to do likewise.
“As the head of the organization, I took responsibility for this,” said Bar, who was speaking at a memorial ceremony for fallen Shin Bet personnel. “And now… I have chosen to announce the fulfillment of that responsibility and my decision to end my tenure as head of the Shin Bet.”
Opposition leaders lauded the move as a long-overdue act of accountability.
“Ronen Bar made the correct and appropriate decision. This is what taking responsibility looks like,” tweeted opposition leader Yair Lapid. “Of those responsible for the greatest failure in the country’s history, only one is still holding on to his chair.”
National Unity party chief Benny Gantz echoed the sentiment, saying, “Ronen and the Shin Bet failed on October 7… He did the same today in his decision to resign. It is appropriate and correct that the political echelon also fulfills the same responsibility.”
Bar’s critics on the right, however, slammed his resignation as too little, too late.
Likud MK Ariel Kallner called Bar an “illegal” director who should be detained for insubordination, while MK Avi Maoz of the far-right Noam party declared, “You didn’t resign. You were fired.”
Bar said that while the agency failed to provide early warning of the attack, it had not been blind to the threat.
“Despite efforts to depict a different reality, there was no complacency in the Shin Bet. To the contrary, there was a recognition of the Hamas threat… and yet we failed,” he said.
Without directly naming Netanyahu, Bar criticized those unwilling to accept blame. “The fulfillment of responsibility in practice is an inseparable part of personal example and the legacy of our leaders,” he said. “We have no legitimacy to lead without it.”
Bar warned of threats to the agency’s independence and called on the High Court to ensure institutional protections for future Shin Bet chiefs. “Over the past month, I fought for this,” he said. “I hope that its verdict will ensure that the Shin Bet remains so — for the long term and without fear.”
Bar’s decision comes amid a legal dispute with the government over his dismissal. The cabinet unanimously voted to remove him in March at Netanyahu’s urging, a move Bar challenged in court. In an affidavit, Bar accused the prime minister of attempting to politicize the Shin Bet and demand personal loyalty over legal duty. Netanyahu, in a counter-affidavit, denied the allegations.
Netanyahu and Bar have been blaming each other over what was known before Hamas’ October 7 attack and whether it could have been prevented, as well as the “Qatargate” scandal.
Bar claims that Netanyahu’s decision to dismiss him was influenced by a conflict of interest related to the ongoing investigation. The government argues that Bar should have resigned after the agency completed its internal investigation in March.
The Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic intelligence service, is responsible for counterterrorism, counterintelligence, internal security, VIP protection, and cybersecurity. The only Shin Bet director to ever leave before the end of his five-year term was Carmi Gillon, who resigned in the aftermath of the 1995 assassination of Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.
Bar’s announcement also comes amid continuing calls for a broader state commission of inquiry.
Such commissions have broader authority to summon witnesses and collect evidence and are headed by a senior Supreme Court justice. They may include personal recommendations about individuals under investigation, though the government is not bound to act on them.
Netanyahu has resisted calls for an inquiry, saying he opposes a “politically biased” probe. Critics accuse the Prime Minister of delaying the inquiry and trying to water down its mandate.
The last state commission of inquiry, which investigated Israel’s worst civilian disaster — a stampede that killed 45 people at a holy site on Mount Meron — held Netanyahu personally responsible for the tragedy in a report released in 2024.
Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and likely challenger to Benjamin Netanyahu was hospitalized Sunday morning at the Meir Medical Center in Kfar Saba after experiencing a cardiac episode during a fitness workout...
Jerusalem, 20 April, 2025 (TPS-IL) — Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and likely challenger to Benjamin Netanyahu was hospitalized Sunday morning at the Meir Medical Center in Kfar Saba after experiencing a cardiac episode during a fitness workout. According to a hospital statement, Bennett underwent a catheterization procedure and is in stable condition under medical supervision.
The health scare comes just weeks after Bennett, 53, signaled a possible return to politics. In early April, he registered a new political party under the provisional name “Bennett 2026,” following several months of internal research aimed at identifying potential voters. Sources close to Bennett say a formal decision on whether he will run in the next election has not yet been made, but polling suggests strong support. A recent Maariv survey found that a party led by Bennett could win as many as 27 Knesset seats—outpacing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud, which polled at 19 seats.
Unless the governing coalition collapses, national elections are not due to be held until October 2026.
Bennett, who last served as premier from 2021 to 2022, has maintained a low public profile since leaving office. However, speculation about his return has intensified. In a September 2024 interview with Germany’s Bild newspaper, he said he was open to returning to public life, even hinting at a potential willingness to serve in a coalition with Netanyahu. “If I have to sweep floors for my nation, I will sweep floors,” he said. “I will be in any position where I can make a difference.”
Bennett seen just a day before his hospitalization in Be’er Ganim attending Mimouna celebrations, a traditional North African festivity marking the end of the week-long Passover holiday. His sudden health issue has prompted an outpouring of support, including well-wishes from political rival MK Benny Gantz, who tweeted: “I wish Naftali Bennett a speedy recovery and good health.”
Bennett first entered politics in 2006 as Netanyahu’s Chief of Staff, then later founded the New Right and Yamina parties.
Despite winning seven seats in the 2021 elections, Bennett agreed to a rotation government with Yair Lapid in which Bennett would serve as Prime Minister until 2023. But Bennett stepped down for Lapid in 2022 after failing to push a budget through the Knesset.