A very pro-Lapid interviewer. It seems everyone is trying to paint themselves as neither right nor left - or both right and left. The one point that they miss in the discussion, though they almost say it, is that everyone is fighting because of Netanyahu - many successful politicians have left Likud in order to further their political aims. Why? All the parties are fighting with each other for the bigger slice of the coalition pie, next to Netanyahu. What has Netanyahu done to keep everyone on a leash?
1. Lapid is desperate to stop the YA bleeding to BY - that's all you need to know. 2. I hope Lapid will also stop monies going to high school in Mitzpe Yericho where MK Lipman's son studies.
I just do not understand what he is doing in a party where the leader became Finance Minister, a position which normally requires the minister to meet the Chief Rabbis before Pesach to sell the state's chametz, and refused to participate. A party that united with Bayit Yehudi to cut payments to yeshivot and cut children's allowances to one of the lowest in the western world.
A very pro-Lapid interviewer. It seems everyone is trying to paint themselves as neither right nor left - or both right and left. The one point that they miss in the discussion, though they almost say it, is that everyone is fighting because of Netanyahu - many successful politicians have left Likud in order to further their political aims. Why? All the parties are fighting with each other for the bigger slice of the coalition pie, next to Netanyahu. What has Netanyahu done to keep everyone on a leash?
ReplyDeleteGood riddance to the tuchus-lecher
ReplyDelete1. Lapid is desperate to stop the YA bleeding to BY - that's all you need to know.
ReplyDelete2. I hope Lapid will also stop monies going to high school in Mitzpe Yericho where MK Lipman's son studies.
DR,
DeleteAs much as I think MK Lipman is an incompetent FOOL (and I do), I think you should leave his kids out of it.
I just do not understand what he is doing in a party where the leader became Finance Minister, a position which normally requires the minister to meet the Chief Rabbis before Pesach to sell the state's chametz, and refused to participate. A party that united with Bayit Yehudi to cut payments to yeshivot and cut children's allowances to one of the lowest in the western world.
ReplyDelete