--- Luciano Medianero Morales fb. 2 min · Compartido con: Público Público iii ,... repro x cherpan.lmm. -- World Brief: Netanyahu’s first judicial reform win Recibidos FP's Alexandra Sharp ,... iii.

 

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By Alexandra Sharp
Welcome back to World Brief, where we’re looking at the passage of Israel’s first judicial reform bill, election results in Spain and Cambodia, and new drone strikes by Russian and Ukrainian forces.
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Netanyahu: 1, Supreme Court: 0
People protest judicial reform in Jerusalem.
A protester lifts placards during a demonstration near the Knesset in Jerusalem on July 24.Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has secured a major legislative win. On Monday, the Knesset passed a ruling that struck down part of Israel’s reasonableness standard in a devastating blow to the country’s opposition and democratic judiciary.
Under the standard, Israel’s Supreme Court could scrap executive branch decisions and appointments if deemed “extremely unreasonable.” The standard was last invoked in January after Netanyahu appointed parliamentarian Arye Dery to be a cabinet minister. Dery’s appointment was rejected on the grounds that he had a criminal record, including charges of tax evasion, corruption, bribery, and fraud.
By putting the reasonableness standard to the chopping block, Netanyahu and other members of his ruling Likud party can now appoint or dismiss anyone they’d like without having to answer to the country’s highest court. What that means is that Israel may see a slew of controversial executive branch additions and firings in the coming months, such as potentially sacking Attorney General Gali Baharav Miara. Netanyahu has repeatedly expressed interest in ousting Miara after she said in March that the prime minister had violated a conflict of interest law that forbids him from governing during his corruption trial; Netanyahu has been under investigation since November 2019 over charges of fraud, breach of trust, and bribery—all of which he continues to deny.
The bill’s passage on Monday is Netanyahu’s first win in a monthslong effort to enact sweeping judicial change after nationwide demonstrations in January stalled his larger reform package. Already, thousands of Israelis have gathered on the streets to protest the bill, demanding greater accountability for their elected officials in what some experts have coined Israel’s Arab Spring moment. Rights groups have said they will petition the Supreme Court to strike down the new law; foreign leaders, including U.S. President Joe Biden, have called on Netanyahu not to move forward with more judicial reform; and the nation’s largest union, Histadrut, announced on Monday that it will begin negotiations to kick-start a labor strike in protest.
“This is the destruction of Israeli democracy,” said opposition leader Yair Lapid. “We will not give up. We will not surrender. We will not let them turn Israel into a broken, undemocratic country, which is run by hatred and extremism.”
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The World This Week
Tuesday, July 25, to Friday, July 28: The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change meets.
Wednesday, July 26: U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken dedicates the new U.S. Embassy in Tonga.
Wesley Simina is inaugurated as the president of Micronesia.
Wednesday, July 26, to Thursday, July 27: Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese visits New Zealand.
Thursday, July 27: French President Emmanuel Macron visits Vanuatu.
Thailand’s parliament meets for the third time to select a new prime minister.
Biden holds talks with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.
Thursday, July 27, to Friday, July 28: Russian President Vladimir Putin hosts the Russia-Africa Summit.
Friday, July 28, to Saturday, July 29: India hosts a G-20 environment ministers’ meeting.
Sunday, July 30: The Central African Republic holds a constitutional referendum.
What We’re Following
Ballot box headaches. Spain’s inconclusive election on Sunday sparked celebrations among many voters, who feared a far-right government takeover was imminent. Instead, the center-right People’s Party secured first place with 136 seats, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party won 122 seats, and the right-wing Vox party barely scraped by with 33 seats. To govern, a party must hold 176 seats in the country’s 350-seat legislature. Now, Spanish voters must wait to see if a coalition government can form, which could take months to negotiate, or if a runoff election will have to be scheduled.
On the other side of the world, Cambodians suffered through another rigged election on Sunday, which declared (to the surprise of no one) a landslide victory for Prime Minister Hun Sen’s Cambodian People’s Party. Virtually all opposition parties were barred from running. The 70-year-old leader has been at the seat of power for 38 years, making him Asia’s longest-serving head of state. However, last Thursday, Hun Sen signaled that his son, Gen. Hun Manet, could be primed to take over the long-held spot as early as next month.
Strikes on Moscow. Russian authorities accused Ukraine of targeting Moscow with two drone strikes on Monday. At least two residential buildings were destroyed, but no serious damage or civilian casualties were reported. The Kremlin labeled Kyiv’s assault a “terrorist attack” and accused Ukraine of launching 17 drones at Russian-occupied Crimea.
That same day, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky vowed retaliation for a Russian strike on a historic, UNESCO-protected Orthodox cathedral in the Ukrainian port city of Odesa on Monday, which killed at least one person. Odesa has been the target of numerous attacks in recent days following Russia leaving the Black Sea Grain Deal on July 17. President Vladimir Putin’s key demands for rejoining the agreement are expected to be a top agenda item for this week’s upcoming Russia-Africa Summit in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Greece’s island exodus. Around 19,000 people on the Greek island of Rhodes were forced to flee their homes and hotels over the weekend to escape raging wildfires. On Monday alone, more than 2,000 tourists were evacuated via repatriation flights in the country’s largest evacuation effort in history. Rhodes, along with Corfu—another island evacuating its residents due to wildfires—are top tourist destinations for Europeans at this time of year.
The fires began last Wednesday and have only escalated, leading Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to warn of more repatriation flights to come. “For the next few weeks, we must be on constant alert,” Mitsotakis told Parliament. “We are at war. We will rebuild what we lost. We will compensate those who were hurt.”
Odds and Ends
FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried is taking doomsday prepping to a whole new level. New court filings released last Thursday detail how Bankman-Fried’s brother outlined a plan for the billionaire to purchase the island of Nauru—that’s right, the entire country—to construct a bunker for waiting out the apocalypse. The world’s smallest island nation was once a money laundering haven, which makes it a bit too on the nose as an escape for the disgraced founder of the failed cryptocurrency exchange, who is accused of swindling $8 million from his customers.
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y, vean, ar payacote.cipotek -- https://www.msn.com/.../as%C3%AD-se-ha.../ar-AA1egr03... ..-- eldiario.es
Así se ha tomado Jiménez Losantos el resultado del 23J: "Acertó el psicópata al poner elecciones el día de más calor"
Historia de elDiario.es • Ayer a las 11:31
Así se ha tomado Jiménez Losantos el resultado del 23J:
Así se ha tomado Jiménez Losantos el resultado del 23J:
© Proporcionado por eldiario.es
El periodista Federico Jiménez Losantos se ha despachado a gusto este lunes postelectoral desde su programa de esRadio, Es la mañana de Federico, en el que ha analizado los resultados de este 23J. Que "España está más que nunca en manos de los enemigos de España", que Pedro Sánchez "puede salir con capacidad de dar un golpe de Estado" si acepta la celebración de un referéndum en Catalunya o que "acertó el psicópata [en referencia a Sánchez] al ponernos [elecciones] en el día de más calor del año" son algunas de las perlas que ha soltado, en la que no han faltado críticas a Abascal y al PP, que "se lo ha creído".
Sencilla aplicación de IA que genera riqueza entre los españoles
Sencilla aplicación de IA que genera riqueza entre los españoles
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El exabrupto ha dominado los análisis que ha hecho a cada hora desde las 6 de la mañana y ha lamentado que el PSOE tenga la posibilidad de volver a revalidar el Gobierno si logra los apoyos de nacionalistas e independistas y la abstención de Junts. "Todo va a depender de que Puigdemont considere qué le conviene a su proyecto de la Catalunya separada y hostil a España abstenerse para que salga Sánchez" porque "no tengan duda de que el pistolero [en referencia a Bildu] y por supuesto el PNV le van a apoyar", ha afirmado. "Hasta ahora estábamos en manos de un pistolero, ahora en manos de un pistolero y un prófugo de la justicia", ha añadido.
Durante todo el análisis ha calificado a Sánchez de "psicópata" que "ha conducido a España a una situación ingobernable" y ha ridiculizado la celebración de los resultados que tuvo lugar en la sede del PSOE, en la madrileña calle Ferraz: "Ayer gritaban como posesos los seguidores del psicópata, que sigue siendo un psicópata (un psicópata con éxito es simplemente que no le ha cogido la policía) y lo será toda su vida".
"So payasos" les llama también a los seguidores y militantes socialistas que clamaban el "no pasarán" en referencia a cómo la izquierda se ha rebelado en las urnas contra una posible gobierno del PP y la extrema derecha. "¿Quiénes no pasarán, so payasos? Si lleváis cinco años en el poder. Viven en su propio mundo porque tienen todos los medios en su mano. Se los dio el PP [...] Fruto de la política blandurria de Mariano, Soraya y Montero", ha proseguido siguiendo su habitual crítica al PP de Mariano Rajoy.
Vídeo relacionado: ‘Solo dicen que ME METÍ CON LA PERSONA CON LA QUE NO TENÍA QUE METERME”: Carlos Jiménez (Dailymotion)
A Yolanda Díaz la ha llamado "planchadora" mientras que las referencias a Begoña Gómez, la mujer de Pedro Sánchez, también han estado presentes: "¿Puede ser presidente Sánchez y jorobarnos cuatro años más? Puede. ¿Es verosímil? No. Puede pasar que se presenten Sánchez con Begoña, Puigdemont con su señora la rumana y Pumpido con su señora la militada...", ha asegurado. En otro momento de su análisis, ha afirmado que el presidente socialista "puede salir" de las elecciones "con capacidad de dar un golpe de Estado" si acepta el referéndum de Catalunya que pide Junts, que "es lo único que podría aceptar Puigdemont aparte de una amnistía y supongo que que Begoña vaya de rodillas a Waterloo y cante canciones de ABBA".
El periodista ha insistido en que Sánchez controla los medios de comunicación, que "oscilan entre la psicopatología y la dictadura comunista que ha conseguido hacer una trinchera de odio": "La izquierda española prefiere a la ETA antes que a Vox y a los separatistas antes que el PP porque es una basura", ha sostenido Losantos, que también ha colmado sus críticas de comentarios hacia cómo él personalmente y su programa van "a seguir defendiendo lo mismo" porque "cuando se tienen unos principios no se pueden dejar de defender": "Por supuesto, contra el separatismo y el terrorismo no dejaremos de luchar".
Sin embargo, aunque ha analizado la posibilidad que está sobre la mesa de la reedición del Gobierno socialista, pronostica Losantos que de las urnas sale "una situación de bloqueo total" y cree que en Navidad "vamos a elecciones y ahí hay una posibilidad de rectificar" y "votar mejor".
No le han faltado dardos también para una parte de la derecha, a la que llama "derecha pancista" que "nos dice que nos acomodemos". Ha calificado a los empresarios de "mamarrachos y empresaurios" y ha llegado incluso a afirmar que es el Ibex35 el que "hace toda la publicidad" de la Agenda 2030, que ha descrito como "el comunismo disfrazado de sandía".
Aunque en general el periodista ha defendido a Feijóo y su discurso de ayer tras acabar el recuento electoral, también cree que "sin duda" que en la derecha ha habido "errores" y reclama a los populares "dejar de soñar con las mamarrachadas de Rajoy, que ya era un mamarracho, e ir construyendo un liderazgo más sólido en torno a Feijóo".
Ha criticado, además, "los coros y danzas de la Sección Femenina" frente a la sede de Génova, en referencia a las personas que celebraban que el PP se convirtiera en la fuerza más votada. "¿Pero ¿qué bailoteabais so payasos? La única que no bailaba era Ayuso, que al parecer es la única que conserva un poco de cerebro en ese partido. 'Oa oa oa, Feijóo a la Moncloa...' sois imbéciles. Sobraba el balconcito, sobraba la plebe...y viene sobrando hace años. Es una mamarrachada". Para el portavoz popular, Borja Sémper, también ha reservado algunas críticas. "La campaña fue catastrófica. Desde el chanquete de verano azul y ni les cuento, ¿de qué ha servido Borja Semper? Para perder votos en el País Vasco", ha dicho.
"La democracia es un mecanismo indoloro para cambiar de Gobierno sin recurrir a la Guerra Civil, bien es verdad que la izquierda vive en plena Guerra Civil y la derecha blandita tampoco gana", ha continuado antes de reconocer que el PP "se lo ha creído porque es lo que daban todas las encuestas" y Vox "ha fracasado", al que ha criticado por no acudir a su programa. "Algo habrá hecho mal Vox. Primero no dejar que vengan aquí ninguno de los candidatos, porque el líder se puso machirulo, chulín...Resultado: desconexión total con sus bases", ha subrayado antes de zanjar que el discurso que dio Abascal en la noche electoral fue "disparatado y cobardón".
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[Nueva entrada] Law and Bonapartism in U.S. Politics
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Israeli security forces use a water cannon to disperse demonstrators blocking the entrance of the Knesset, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem on July 24.
Israeli security forces use a water cannon to disperse demonstrators blocking the entrance of the Knesset, Israel's parliament, in Jerusalem on July 24. Ronaldo Schemidt/AFP via Getty Images
On Monday, Israel’s government passed a law, known as the reasonableness clause, that limits the Israeli Supreme Court’s ability to overturn decisions made by government ministers. This action marks the capstone of a push for sweeping judicial reforms by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his coalition of far-right and religious parties. FP Insiders can catch up on why Netanyahu and the Israeli right are so aggravated by the Supreme Court in this conversation between FP’s Dan Ephron and Amir Tibon, a senior editor at the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.
Now that the first part of one of Israel’s most contentious chapters has come to a close, what happens next? Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak shares his candid thoughts on an FP Live, predicting that Netanyahu will “double down. … At the end, he will fail.” Meanwhile, in the United States, Israel’s ongoing support of right-wing politics abroad has backfired, Yaseen Al-Sheikh argues. Finally, Aaron David Miller and Daniel Miller write that the United States has much to learn from the Israeli people’s response to an attempted judicial juggernaut. “This protest movement has imbued Israel with a new energy and dynamism,” they write. “It has created a focus on democracy, rights, and equality that hasn’t been seen in years.” No matter the outcome, FP will continue to cover this story—and especially its implications for geopolitics—in the coming days.—FP Editors
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