CPAC
Conservative commentator Dave Rubin told JNS he’s confident about the Jewish state’s future: “I’m pretty sure God’s on our side.”
U.S. President Donald Trump’s rise offers a rare opportunity to break global elite’s stranglehold on Brussels, conference participants said.
The conference is hosted by the Budapest-based Center for Fundamental Rights, perhaps the most prominent conservative group in Hungary.
Both men condemned Steven Bannon’s perceived Nazi salute at CPAC.
If the captives, both living and dead, are not returned, Israel will expand the agricultural areas of the kibbutzim Be’eri and Nir Oz into the Gaza perimeter, said the Israeli finance minister.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is “just so angry, and he should be,” the U.S. president told reporters.
“We will not rest until every hostage is brought home and Hamas is eradicated,” the congresswoman and nominee for U.S. envoy to the United Nations said.
“All of our students deserve to be safe,” the U.S. attorney general said at CPAC in the Washington area.
“We have to push forward until everybody’s out. Then we will be done,” Adi Alexander said at the annual gathering of conservatives.
“From the river to the sea, Israel will be free: this should be the slogan chanted at Columbia University, Harvard, Yale and Berkeley,” says Knesset member Amit Halevi.
At the Conservative Political Action Conference in Budapest, Hungary, former U.S. presidential candidate Rick Santorum says the administration “has been anything but supportive of Israel.”
There are calls for increased military pressure on Iranian terror proxies Hamas and Hezbollah.