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U.S. Politics

The federal government recently unsealed the complaint against a 24-year-old, who faces up to eight years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines.
Rep. Doug Lamborn will receive the first-ever Rabbi Benny Elon award, named after the late Israeli tourism minister who spearheaded Israel’s ties with the evangelical Christian community.
The U.S. national security advisor is scheduled to discuss the Lebanon ceasefire, the collapse of Syria’s Assad regime and the status of hostage talks with Hamas.
The development may settle a long legal saga on whether American victims can sue the Palestinian Authority over attacks by it or its personnel.
It comes in the backdrop of a Holocaust denier who is projected to win the country’s premiership in a matter of days.
Rep. Aaron Bean said educators are “substituting the traditional narrative of this great but flawed nation with a political story built on racial resentment and collective guilt.”
“Iran continues to funnel revenues from its petroleum trade toward the development of its nuclear program,” stated Bradley Smith, a U.S. Treasury Department official.
Matthew Miller, the Foggy Bottom spokesman, criticized the Israeli government for “much more intense conversations than should have been necessary” about extending the Israeli-Palestinian banking agreement.
Washington reportedly pledged to continue its opposition to the unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state in exchange for extending the deal.
Rawhi Fattouh, 75, said last year that “Jerusalem belongs exclusively to the Palestinians, the Arabs and the Muslims.”
“Joe Biden and all Democrat leaders have an obligation to speak up and condemn this now,” House Speaker Mike Johnson said.
“Reminder: There is no peace agreement,” wrote Gerald Steinberg, of NGO Monitor. “The goal of the Tehran regime and its proxy terror armies (in this case, Hezbollah) remains the destruction of Israel.”