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Trump: ‘Con Job’ When Dems Mention ‘Affordability’

Matzav -

President Donald Trump unleashed a sharp critique of Democratic economic rhetoric during a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday, dismissing their emphasis on “affordability” as nothing more than a scripted talking point crafted for political gain. He insisted the term has become a hollow slogan rather than a reflection of Americans’ lived experience.

In a live broadcast carried by Newsmax, Trump argued that Democrats “just say the word” affordability without enacting policies that actually make everyday costs manageable. “There’s this fake narrative that the Democrats talk about affordability. They just say the word. It doesn’t mean anything to anybody,” he said, framing their messaging as deceptive and disconnected.

The president contended that he stepped into office facing an extraordinarily strained economy. “I inherited the worst inflation in history. There was no affordability. Nobody could afford anything. The prices were massively high,” he declared, presenting his administration as having reversed that trend.

Trump highlighted falling energy costs as evidence of economic recovery, asserting that easing fuel and electricity prices are driving down costs across the board. “Our prices now for energy, for gasoline are really low. Electricity is coming down, and when that comes down, everything comes down,” he said.

He repeatedly accused Democrats of misleading the public about inflation and cost-of-living issues. “But the word affordability is a Democrat scam,” Trump said. “They say it and then they go on to the next subject and everyone thinks, Oh, they had lower prices. No, they had the worst inflation in the history of our country.”

Trump acknowledged that some challenge his description of past inflation peaks, but he said either way, the economic picture before his presidency was bleak. “Some people like to correct me and they say 48 years. I say it’s not 48 years, it’s much more. But whether it’s 48 years or ever, it’s pretty bad,” he said.

He credited his economic team with reversing the inflation trajectory since last January, though he admitted the job is not complete. “There is still more to do. There’s always more to do,” Trump said, describing current inflation levels as “very good” and likely to improve going forward.

At the same time, he cautioned that the aim is not to drive inflation all the way down to zero, arguing that a downturn in prices could be harmful. “Deflation can be worse than inflation,” he warned. “We have it almost … we’ll soon be at a perfect level,” Trump said.

{Matzav.com}

Herzog Calls Off Meeting With Yair Golan After “Violent and Insulting” Comments Invoking His Father

Matzav -

Tensions between President Isaac Herzog and Democrats chair Yair Golan escalated sharply after Golan publicly urged Herzog not to serve as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s “guardian” by approving a pardon without any acknowledgment of wrongdoing. In response, Herzog scrapped a planned meeting with the MK, signaling clear displeasure with the tone and substance of Golan’s remarks.

The confrontation began when Golan released a pointed statement challenging Herzog directly. “Are you loyal to the state and the law, or are you Netanyahu’s guardian?” he declared, framing the decision as a test of presidential integrity. Golan intensified the criticism by invoking Herzog’s lineage, insisting, “I know that your father, President Chaim Herzog, would have kicked Netanyahu out the door, without hesitation and without blinking.”

Channel 12 reported that Herzog refused to meet under what the President’s Office viewed as a wave of “violent and insulting discourse,” canceling the scheduled sit-down as a form of protest. Despite the fallout, Golan appears unfazed. In a conversation with the network, he offered no retraction, noted that the appointment has not been rescheduled, and conveyed no expectation that it will be soon.

“I respect the president, but given the worrying signs on the pardon issue… one must have a clear and staunch position,” he insisted, making it clear that he believes Herzog must safeguard the country’s legal framework. “We expect the president to defend the state of Israel’s laws, its institutions, its representatives and the judicial branch.”

Golan argued that this moment demands blunt honesty about Israel’s direction. “It’s come time to tell ourselves and everyone, Israel is at a fateful hour. We must fight for the future of Israel as a democratic and free country.” He concluded by emphasizing the urgency behind his appeal: “My sole intention to the president was to say this is an emergency and we all have the duty — the first citizen and every other citizen — to fight for Israel’s future.”

{Matzav.com}

PA Textbooks: Six-Year-Olds To Be Taught About ‘Martyrs’

Matzav -

A newly released analysis by IMPACT-se paints an alarming portrait of the Palestinian Authority’s upcoming 2025–2026 academic curriculum, revealing that the educational material continues to foster hostility rather than coexistence.

The review concludes that the updated curriculum maintains a pattern of content that “contradicts UNESCO standards for education for peace and tolerance,” with no meaningful shift away from rhetoric that encourages extremism.

Researchers scrutinized 290 textbooks and instructional guides used across grades 1 through 12 in Gaza, Judea, Samaria, and eastern Jerusalem, including materials used in UNRWA-affiliated schools.

According to the findings, the curriculum remains steeped in messaging that glorifies radical nationalism, stokes animosity, promotes antisemitism, and legitimizes violent struggle.

In multiple places, the books employ overtly antisemitic language. Jews are described as “liars,” “corrupt,” “devil’s helpers,” and “bloodthirsty monsters,” with the narrative repeatedly stripping Israelis of basic humanity.

Examples cited include passages depicting Israeli soldiers as snipers targeting children “for no reason,” or as combatants committing atrocities while “laughing loudly.”

The report documents that themes of jihad and martyrdom permeate the curriculum from the earliest grades. Even first graders encounter the word “Shahid” during lessons on the Arabic alphabet. Terms like “the peak of faith” and promises of “reward in paradise” are intertwined with jihad-related messages, at times including references to 72 virgins.

Political indoctrination appears even in science and math books. Algebra lessons incorporate variables such as “number of shahids,” and physics problems describe scenarios like a girl launching a projectile with a slingshot.

Israel itself is erased from the educational landscape. Maps omit its name and borders, and cities like Tel Aviv and Haifa are removed entirely. Instead, students are taught about a “Greater Palestine” stretching from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean Sea.

Despite prolonged international pressure — especially from the European Union — the report states that “no substantive reform” has taken place. The 2025–2026 textbooks, including those issued after the October 7th massacre, continue to echo the same incitement found in previous editions.

{Matzav.com}

Capitol Precedent: Bill Proposing Sanctions On Israel Advanced In Congress

Matzav -

A new measure introduced on Capitol Hill has triggered sharp reactions after calling for sanctions and an arms embargo on Israel. The legislation, put forward in the House of Representatives, marks the first instance of such a proposal ever formally reaching Congress.

Leading the effort is Michigan Rep. Rashida Tlaib, whose long-standing hostility toward Israel is well known. She has secured the backing of 22 other Democratic members, forming the largest congressional bloc to publicly attach their names to such a measure to date.

Advocates of the BDS movement quickly seized on the development, highlighting what they described as the broader meaning of the proposal. They argued that the bill’s mere submission signals that “sanctions against Israel” have moved into the mainstream of American discourse.

Still, political analysts in Washington say that the initiative is unlikely to progress. Despite its potential to stir debate, it is expected to stall almost immediately because support for Israel remains a firmly rooted bipartisan norm in Congress.

In Israel, the organization Ad Kan urged the country’s top officials to act. The group asked both the Foreign Minister and the Interior Minister to prevent every lawmaker who endorsed the bill from entering Israel, adding that it will “continue to monitor and report” on further developments.

{Matzav.com}

Putin: If Europe Wants War, Then Russia Is Ready

Matzav -

Russia’s president used a Tuesday appearance in Moscow to insist that the Kremlin seeks no confrontation with European capitals, while warning that if Europe pushes for war, Russia is “ready right now to fight.” He charged that European governments have put forward terms for a settlement in Ukraine that Moscow rejects out of hand.

Vladimir Putin also accused European backers of Kyiv of derailing Washington’s diplomatic push to end the conflict, leveling the claim just before his scheduled Kremlin talks with special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner. “They don’t have a peace agenda, they’re on the side of the war,” he declared, contending that repeated revisions to peace outlines have been loaded with “demands that are absolutely unacceptable to Russia,” which he said were crafted to “block the entire peace process” — all so that Moscow could then be blamed. “That’s their goal,” he said.

These remarks fit neatly into the narrative Russia has advanced since President Donald Trump returned to office and launched direct conversations with Moscow, portraying Europe’s support for Ukraine as the main obstacle to reaching a deal.

Witkoff and Kushner arrived in Moscow carrying a still-developing framework the U.S. hopes could bring the nearly four-year-old war to a close. Their visit overlapped with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s trip to Ireland, part of his rapid tour through European countries that have kept Ukraine’s defenses afloat.

Speaking alongside Irish Prime Minister Micheál Martin, Zelenskyy said he expected quick word from the U.S. envoys on whether negotiations might advance, noting that Trump’s original 28-point plan was trimmed to 20 points during Sunday’s discussions in Florida between American and Ukrainian teams. “They want to report right after that meeting to us, specifically. The future and the next steps depend on these signals. Such steps will change throughout today, even hour by hour, I believe,” he said. If the outcome looks fair, he added, “we then might meet very soon, meet with the American delegation.”

Zelenskyy stressed that time is lethal: “There is a lot of dialogue, but we need results. Our people are dying every day.” He reiterated, “I am ready … to meet with President Trump. It all depends on today’s talks.”

Before heading to their Kremlin appointment, Witkoff and Kushner were spotted leaving a Moscow restaurant midday Tuesday. The White House has been intensifying efforts after months of stalled progress, dispatching senior officials to pursue momentum for a deal. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Kushner will join the session with Putin and that the meeting — involving only Witkoff, Kushner, and a U.S. interpreter — will last “as long as needed.”

Diplomacy has been unfolding on twin tracks, with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio engaging Ukrainian negotiators while Witkoff and Kushner handle the Moscow channel. Zelenskyy noted he had debriefed with Kyiv’s delegation returning from Florida, and Rubio said that while those talks were productive, “there’s more work to be done.”

Zelenskyy said the Florida meeting was shaped by a joint document drafted earlier in Geneva, describing that text as now “finalized,” without elaborating. He also wrote on Telegram that Ukrainian diplomats were ensuring European voices remain “substantially involved” in decisions, warning that Russia is mounting disinformation campaigns to skew the process. “Ukrainian intelligence will provide partners with the information we have about Russia’s true intentions and its attempts to use diplomatic efforts as cover to ease sanctions and block important collective European decisions,” he said.

During his meetings in Dublin — his first official visit to Ireland — Zelenskyy spoke with political leaders and lawmakers. Ireland, militarily neutral and outside NATO, has nonetheless provided nonlethal aid, and more than 100,000 Ukrainian refugees have settled there since Russia invaded on Feb. 24, 2022.

Despite the flurry of diplomacy this week, major unknowns remain. Key issues such as territorial control are still unresolved, and European officials caution that any path to peace will be slow and fraught. Europe, concerned about Russia’s long-term ambitions and searching for ways to keep Ukraine funded past this year, is also pressing for a stronger role after being sidelined by Washington. Security guarantees for Ukraine are under discussion as well.

On Monday, Zelenskyy was in Paris, where French President Emmanuel Macron said the two leaders held a call with Witkoff, along with discussions involving eight other European states, top EU officials, and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte. Macron predicted “crucial discussions” in the coming days between Washington and its partners. His comments came after Sunday’s U.S.–Ukraine meeting, which Rubio also described as productive.

Diplomats continue wrestling with whether Kyiv should be expected to concede territory and how any future security architecture could protect Ukraine — both fundamental sticking points. Zelenskyy, meanwhile, is confronting one of the bleakest phases of the war: fending off Russia on the battlefield, contending with a corruption scandal shaking his government, and scrambling to secure financial lifelines.

Late Monday, Moscow claimed that its forces had seized Pokrovsk, a strategically important city in the Donetsk region. Zelenskyy countered in Paris that fighting remained active there. On Tuesday, Ukraine’s general staff dismissed the Russian assertion as propaganda, saying on Facebook that the army was preparing additional supply routes to support troops defending the area.

{Matzav.com}

Israel to Impose NIS 10,000 Fines for Phone Use While Driving, Regev Warns: “We Will Confiscate Vehicles”

Yeshiva World News -

Israel is preparing to introduce one of the toughest distracted-driving crackdowns in its history, after Transportation Minister Miri Regev announced that police will begin issuing immediate NIS 10,000 ($3,000) fines to drivers caught using their phones on the road—without a court hearing or appeal process in between. Speaking Monday today at a transportation, energy, and […]

IDF Says It Can Absorb Thousands More Chareidim as Bitter Fight Over Conscription Law Intensifies

Yeshiva World News -

A senior IDF official told lawmakers on Tuesday that the army is fully capable of drafting thousands more Chareidi men each year, directly challenging long-standing political claims that the military cannot absorb large-scale Chareidi enlistment. Brig. Gen. Shay Tayeb, head of the IDF Personnel Directorate’s Planning and Personnel Management Division, said the military could take […]

Despite Coalition Rebellion, Netanyahu Reassures Chareidi Parties: “We Will Secure a Majority for the New Draft Law”

Matzav -

A political storm erupted Monday as numerous coalition MKs — especially from the Religious Zionism party — publicly announced that they would vote against the current version of the new draft law submitted to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee. But according to Chareidi party sources, Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu appears far less alarmed than expected.

Late Monday night, Netanyahu sent a message to senior representatives of the Chareidi factions stating that he believes he will succeed in assembling a majority to pass the draft law now under committee review. His assessment came even as tensions within the coalition intensified.

Chareidi lawmakers were stunned by the scale of opposition from within their own partnership. While they anticipated a handful of dissenters, they did not expect so many coalition MKs to openly declare that they would vote against the proposed legislation.

To make matters worse, senior coalition officials began briefing reporters that “the law was born dead,” a phrase first publicized by journalist Amit Segal. They predicted the bill would not survive a vote on the Knesset floor. Furious at the internal backlash — and at the media briefings — Chareidi party leaders delivered sharp messages to the Prime Minister’s Office demanding clarity and commitment.

Sources say that Netanyahu responded confidently, assuring the Chareidi factions that despite the vocal opposition, he expects to secure enough support for the legislation. He conveyed that, in his view, the law will pass its second and third readings within five weeks.

Still, senior Chareidi officials are deeply uneasy. They fear that in order to lock in the needed majority, the government may introduce substantial changes to the bill — particularly in the sensitive clause defining “who is considered Chareidi” for the purpose of calculating draft quotas. According to one veteran Chareidi figure closely involved in the negotiations, “We are barely able to vote for the current draft as it is. The rabbonim told us explicitly this is the absolute limit. If changes are made, Netanyahu may gain the votes of the Religious Zionism party and the Likud rebels, but he will lose the Chareidim — and once again there will be no majority.”

Meanwhile, the Religious Zionism faction issued a public statement Tuesday reiterating its stance: “We reaffirmed in our faction meeting that we will vote only for a law that brings about real and immediate enlistment of Chareidim to the IDF in order to meet the army’s needs and ease the burden on soldiers, reservists, and their families. We are consulting and formulating our comments on the law and will insist that they be incorporated in the legislative process. In any case, we will make decisions together and act as a united faction.”

{Matzav.com}

India Orders Mandatory Government App on All Smartphones, Triggering Privacy Uproar

Yeshiva World News -

India’s telecoms ministry has directed smartphone manufacturers to pre-install a government-run cybersecurity app on all new devices, according to a government order, raising concerns of data privacy and user consent in one of the largest handset markets in the world. The Ministry of Communications’ order issued Monday asked smartphone makers to pre-install the government’s “Sanchar […]

Red Cross Transfers To Israel ‘Findings’ From Gaza

Matzav -

The International Committee of the Red Cross on Tuesday handed over to the Israel Defense Forces “findings” that had been transferred to it by Hamas, according to the Israeli Prime Minister’s Office.

The possible remains of a hostage were set to be sent to the Health Ministry’s National Institute of Forensic Medicine at Abu Kabir in Tel Aviv following a military ceremony with the participation of an IDF rabbi, it stated.

The PMO’s hostage and missing persons coordinator is in “continuous contact with the families of the two deceased captives, and in this difficult hour, our hearts are with them,” the statement continued.

“The effort to bring our hostages home continues without interruption and will not cease until the return of the last captive,” the PMO added.

The bodies of two hostages remained in the Gaza Strip: Israel Police counter-terrorism officer Master Sgt. Ran Gvili and Thai national Sudthisak Rinthalak, who was working in Israel’s south when thousands of Hamas terrorists invaded on Oct. 7, 2023.

Under the U.S.-brokered ceasefire that went into effect last month, the Palestinian terrorist organization committed to returning for burial all 28 bodies it was holding, on Oct. 13.

However, Hamas has slow-walked the return of the deceased hostages.

The most recent handover took place on Nov. 25, when the terror group transferred the body of Dror Or. He was buried on Sunday.

Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s office said last week that Hamas must fulfill its obligation, vowing that Israel “will not compromise” until every captive is brought home. JNS

{Matzav.com}

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