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Pro-Israel Democrat Warns Netanyahu: Far-right Coalition Will Damage U.S. Ties


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One of Israel’s biggest supporters in the Democratic Party warned opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu that establishing a coalition with the Kahanist lawmaker Itamar Ben-Gvir could strain ties with the U.S., according to a report by Israeli news site Walla.

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Senator Robert Menendez, the chairman of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, reportedly told Israel’s former prime minister that establishing a coalition with the far-right Religious Zionism list would have “negative consequences” on the relations between the close allies, two sources at the meeting told Walla’s Barak Ravid.

According to one of the sources, “everybody in the room could see how angry Bibi got.” Without the far-right roster, which is currently predicted to be the third largest party in Israel’s parliament, Netanyahu would be highly unlikely to secure a return to power.

In the early September meeting in Israel, Menendez did not relent over his “serious concerns” about Ben-Gvir, despite opposition from Netanyahu.

The hawkish New Jersey senator is considered one of Israel’s closest allies in the Democratic Party, and has been one of the foremost voices rallying against a return to the nuclear deal with Iran.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, who is second on the Religious Zionism list, is considered a disciple of the extremist Rabbi Meir Kahane, who established the now-defunct Jewish Defense League, which was classified by the U.S. as a terrorist organization.

Itamar Ben-Gvir at Jerusalem’s Mahane Yehuda market, on Friday.Credit: Noam Revkin-Fenton

Kahane also set up the ultranationalist Kach party in Israel, which secured one seat in the Knesset in the 1984 election, before being blocked from running in future elections due to racist incitement. One of their members Baruch Goldstein shot to death 29 Palestinian worshipers in the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron in the single worst massacre carried out by an Israeli civilian.

Ben-Gvir has repeatedly expressed sympathy for Goldstein, infamously hanging a picture of him in his house before he took it down due to mounting pressure. The hardline platform of his Otzma Yehudit party, which is part of a joint ticket in Religious Zionism, calls for deportation of “disloyal” Arabs and the introduction of the death penalty against “terrorists.”

While Netanyahu’s spokesperson declined to comment, Ben-Gvir blamed Prime Minister Yair Lapid for the “cynical exploitation” of his party, “dragging even the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee of the U.S. Senate to interfere in Israeli elections. Lapid is ruining Israel’s foreign relations.”

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If Putin Hates Gays, We’ll Support Them: Russia’s War Changes the Lives of Ukrainian LGBTQ


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A civil-partnership bill is being delayed and homophobic voices are still loud, but the war is changing the status of queer people in Ukraine

Liza Rozovsky

Oct 1, 2023 1:02 pm IDT

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Oct 1, 2023 1:02 pm IDT

Liza Rozovsky

Oct 1, 2023 1:02 pm IDT

Get email notification for articles from Liza Rozovsky Follow

Oct 1, 2023 1:02 pm IDT

When he was 17, Pavlo Lagoyda “got caught.” His mother heard him expressing his love for another boy over the phone.

Paid by the office of attorney Rakefet Shfaim

The post If Putin Hates Gays, We’ll Support Them: Russia’s War Changes the Lives of Ukrainian LGBTQ first appeared on The News And Times – thenewsandtimes.com.


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California Governor to Name Laphonza Butler to Feinstein Senate Seat


California Gov. Gavin Newsom will name Laphonza Butler, a Democratic strategist and adviser to Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign, to fill the vacant U.S. Senate seat held by the late Sen. Dianne Feinstein, a spokesman in his office said Sunday.

In choosing Butler, Newsom fulfilled his pledge to appoint a Black woman if Feinstein’s seat should become open. However, he had been facing pressure by some Black politicians and advocacy groups to select Rep. Barbara Lee, a prominent Black congresswoman who is already running for the seat.

Butler will be the only Black woman serving in the U.S. Senate, and the first openly LGBTQ person to represent California in the chamber.

The long-serving Democratic senator died last Thursday after a series of illnesses.

Butler leads Emily’s List, a political organization that supports Democratic women candidates who favor abortion rights. She also is a former labor leader with SEIU 2015, a powerful force in California politics.

Butler currently lives in Maryland, according to her Emily’s List biography.

She did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. A spokesman in Newsom’s office who declined to be named confirmed to The Associated Press that Newsom had chosen Butler.

Democrats control the Senate 51-49, though Feinstein’s seat is vacant. A quick appointment by Newsom will give the Democratic caucus more wiggle room on close votes, including nominations that Republicans uniformly oppose. She could be sworn in as early as Tuesday evening when the Senate returns to session.

Feinstein, the oldest member of Congress and the longest-serving woman in the Senate, died at age 90 after a series of illnesses. She said in February she would not seek reelection in 2024. Lee is one of several prominent Democrats competing for the seat, including Democratic U.S. Reps. Katie Porter and Adam Schiff. Newsom said he did not want to appoint any of the candidates because it would give them an unfair advantage in the race.

His spokesman Anthony York said the governor did not ask Butler to commit to staying out of the race. Dec. 8 is the deadline for candidates to file for the office.

Butler has never held elected office but has a long track record in California politics. She served as a senior adviser to Harris’s 2020 presidential campaign while working at a political firm filled with strategists who have worked for Newsom and many other prominent state Democrats. She also briefly worked in the private sector for Airbnb.

She called Feinstein “a legendary figure for women in politics and around the country,” in a statement posted after Feinstein’s death.

Emily’s List, the group Butler leads, focuses on electing Democratic women who support abortion rights. With the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 decision to overturn women’s constitutional right to abortion, the issue has become a galvanizing one for many Democrats.

It’s not Newsom’s first time selecting a U.S. senator, after being tasked with choosing a replacement for Kamala Harris when she was elected vice president; at that time he selected California Secretary of State Alex Padilla for the post. It was one of a string of appointments Newsom made in late 2020 and early 2021, a power that gave him kingmaker status among the state’s ambitious Democrats.

The seat is expected to stay in Democratic hands in the 2024 election. Democrats in the liberal-leaning state have not lost a statewide election since 2006, and the party holds a nearly 2-to-1 voter registration advantage over Republicans.

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Things to Know About the Nobel Prizes


Fall has arrived in Scandinavia, which means Nobel Prize season is here.

The start of October is when the Nobel committees get together in Stockholm and Oslo to announce the winners of the yearly awards.

First up, as usual, is the Nobel Prize in medicine or physiology, which will be announced Monday by a panel of judges at the Karolinska Institute in the Swedish capital. The prizes in physics, chemistry, literature, peace and economics will follow, with one announcement every weekday until Oct. 9.

Here are some things to know about the Nobel Prizes:

An Idea More Powerful Than Dynamite

The Nobel Prizes were created by Alfred Nobel, a 19th-century businessman and chemist from Sweden. He held more than 300 patents, but his claim to fame before the Nobel Prizes was having invented dynamite by mixing nitroglycerine with a compound that made the explosive more stable.

Dynamite soon became popular in construction and mining as well as in the weapons industry. It made Nobel a very rich man. Perhaps it also made him think about his legacy, because toward the end of his life he decided to use his vast fortune to fund annual prizes “to those who, during the preceding year, have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind.”

The first Nobel Prizes were presented in 1901, five years after his death. In 1968, a sixth prize was created, for economics, by Sweden’s central bank. Though Nobel purists stress that the economics prize is technically not a Nobel Prize, it’s always presented together with the others.

Peace in Norway

For reasons that are not entirely clear, Nobel decided that the peace prize should be awarded in Norway and the other prizes in Sweden. Nobel historians suspect Sweden’s history of militarism may have been a factor.

During Nobel’s lifetime, Sweden and Norway were in a union, which the Norwegians reluctantly joined after the Swedes invaded their country in 1814. It’s possible that Nobel thought Norway would be a more suitable location for a prize meant to encourage “fellowship among nations.”

To this day, the Nobel Peace Prize is a completely Norwegian affair, with the winners selected and announced by a Norwegian committee. The peace prize even has its own ceremony in the Norwegian capital of Oslo on Dec. 10 — the anniversary of Nobel’s death — while the other prizes are presented in Stockholm.

What’s politics got to do with it?

The Nobel Prizes project an aura of being above the political fray, focused solely on the benefit of humanity. But the peace and literature awards, in particular, are sometimes accused of being politicized. Critics question whether winners are selected because their work is truly outstanding or because it aligns with the political preferences of the judges.

The scrutiny can get intense for high-profile awards, such as in 2009, when President Barack Obama won the peace prize less than a year after taking office.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee is an independent body that insists its only mission is to carry out the will of Alfred Nobel. However, it does have links to Norway’s political system. The five members are appointed by the Norwegian Parliament, so the panel’s composition reflects the power balance in the legislature.

To avoid the perception that the prizes are influenced by Norway’s political leaders, sitting members of the Norwegian government or Parliament are barred from serving on the committee. Even so, the panel isn’t always viewed as independent by foreign countries. When imprisoned Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo won the peace prize in 2010, Beijing responded by freezing trade talks with Norway. It took years for Norway-China relations to be restored.

Gold and glory

One reason the prizes are so famous is they come with a generous amount of cash. The Nobel Foundation, which administers the awards, raised the prize money by 10% this year to 11 million kronor (about $1 million). In addition to the money, the winners receive an 18-carat gold medal and diploma when they collect their Nobel Prizes at the award ceremonies in December.

Most winners are proud and humbled by joining the pantheon of Nobel laureates, from Albert Einstein to Mother Teresa. But two winners refused their Nobel Prizes: French writer Jean-Paul Sartre, who turned down the literature prize in 1964, and Vietnamese politician Le Duc Tho, who declined the peace prize that he was meant to share with U.S. diplomat Henry Kissinger in 1973.

Several others were not able to receive their awards because they were imprisoned, such as Belarusian pro-democracy activist Ales Bialiatski, who shared last year’s peace prize with human rights groups in Ukraine and Russia.

Lack of diversity

Historically, the vast majority of Nobel Prize winners have been white men. Though that’s started to change, there is still little diversity among Nobel winners, particularly in the science categories.

To date, 60 women have won Nobel Prizes, including 25 in the scientific categories. Only four women have won the Nobel Prize in physics and just two have won the economics prize.

In the early days of the Nobel Prizes, the lack of diversity among winners could be explained by the lack of diversity among scientists in general. But today critics say the judges need to do a better job at highlighting discoveries made by women and scientists outside Europe and North America.

The prize committees say their decisions are based on scientific merit, not gender, nationality or race. However, they are not deaf to the criticism. Five years ago, the head of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said it had started to ask nominating bodies to make sure they don’t overlook “women or people of other ethnicities or nationalities in their nominations.”

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Matt Gaetz sounds defeated


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Over the weekend, Kevin McCarthy decided that he was a lot more afraid of the House Republicans who are in toss-up races and didn’t want a shutdown, than he was of carnival barkers like Matt Gaetz. In response to the budget deal, Gaetz vowed to get McCarthy ousted. But then House Republicans leaked to the media that they’re planning to expel Gaetz if and when the House Ethics Committee issues a negative report about him.

Gaetz, for his part, was reduced to tweeting this on Sunday night: “I am trying to change Washington.” When you’ve just gotten your butt handed to you in a House floor showdown, and your own party is talking about issuing a report accusing you of underage sex trafficking and then expelling you, and all you have to say for yourself is “I am trying to change Washington,” you clearly think it’s over for you. You’re trying to write your political epitaph.




As I said earlier, it’s a bit tricky to try to predict how the McCarthy-Gaetz standoff will play out. They’re both essentially vowing to oust each other, and the kicker is that they’re both in such vulnerable positions, they might both succeed in taking each other down. Or they might both just lick their wounds and limp away. But Gaetz sure does sound like someone who’s suddenly seeing his political life flashing before him. I’m not saying he’s done, but he sure sounds like he thinks he’s done.

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