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Boaz Bismuth

Boaz Bismuth is editor in chief of Israel Hayom.

Political chaos and social tensions aside, the project called the State of Israel is a resounding success.
No one wants to live in a country that may as well be the Wild West, even if said Wild West is supposed to embody national aspirations.
The most important thing to take from U.S. President Donald Trump’s peace plan is its spirit, which allows Israel to cement a new reality on the ground and reshape its border.
I have come to the realization that Trump is one of the most important presidents in U.S. history because he dares to defy political correctness.
It is a pity that, with such a sympathetic U.S. administration to work with, Israel can’t seem to muster up a stable government—and, it can be said, a stable nationalist government.
In an event that occurs perhaps once or twice a century, Emperor Naruhito of Japan formally declared his ascension to the Chrysanthemum Throne as the nation’s 126th emperor.
Jacques Chirac was loved by his supporters and hated by his opponents; an important world figure has left us.
The anti-Israeli voices on the fringes of U.S. politics are nothing more than a flash in the pan. Israel has always enjoyed bipartisan support.
Israeli elites on the left find it hard, even in 2019, to accept the fact that they have lost power; they cling to investigations and Israel’s imaginary racism to excuse their entrenched opposition to Benjamin Netanyahu. And how their hypocrisy has grown since the last election—all of a sudden, they miss Menachem Begin.