Column
Leftists eager to silence it for speaking out against anti-Semitism cancel a liberal group that dropped bipartisanship to help Democrats.
The Israeli right is wrong to see the prime minister’s deal with the UAE as a capitulation to foreign pressure. He is creating optimal conditions for the Jewish state’s road ahead.
An increasingly influential left-wing faction poses a new litmus test for candidates for office. But rather than being isolated, the radicals are growing in influence.
Joe Biden’s decision to name Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate has to do with only one thing: Identity politics.
In a year that all of us will remember for its unmitigated misery, the accord between Israel and the UAE is a reminder that human beings have the capacity to resolve conflicts, not just initiate them.
At this point, does it matter that the president didn’t actually call neo-Nazis “very fine people?” A defining narrative is based on a confusing but inaccurate quote.
After the Israel-UAE normalization deal, will the Palestinians or the Jewish left realize that events require them to change their thinking? Don’t bet on it.
Treaties with Egypt and Jordan have significant limitations. Will an agreement with the United Arab Emirates usher in a new era of regional peace?
The NAACP’s Jewish board members need to speak out or resign as the venerable civil-rights group allows a Nation of Islam chapter president to keep his office.
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris may be the optimal choices for their party’s pro-Israel wing. Still, questions remain about the administration they hope to lead.
That left-wing activists consider the demolition of terrorists’ homes a cruel form of “collective punishment” is par for the course. But judges are not supposed to base their rulings on political bias.
Chaos and catastrophe in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq raise the question of what the West can do to fix these countries. The unfortunate answer may be nothing.