Today, how ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel could upend Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition government.
Read more:
Last Thursday, the Israeli Supreme Court suspended subsidies for ultra-Orthodox Jews studying in yeshivas instead of serving in the military. This comes at a time of growing frustration with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his far-right government. Protests over the weekend were fueled by anti-government sentiment and frustration from those who want to see Israeli hostages returned from Hamas’s Oct. 7 attack.
Today, reporter Loveday Morris breaks down the impact of the court’s decision, the Israeli protests that started this weekend and the potential of Netanyahu losing power.
Today’s show was produced by Ariel Plotnick. It was mixed by Sean Carter and edited by Lucy Perkins. Thanks also to Bishop Sand and Jesse Mesner-Hage.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
How to be a financially savvy holiday shopper
Sam Altman and the chaos at OpenAI
Trapped in Gaza
Deep Reads: The librarian who couldn’t take it anymore
Surviving to graduation, Part 3
Surviving to graduation, Part 2
Surviving to graduation, Part 1
Why it took so long to get a postpartum depression pill
Netanyahu: The man leading Israel's war against Hamas
The soft power of China’s pandas
Portugal's secret to living longer
Why are so many Americans dying early?
Trump on the witness stand
What Tuesday’s election could mean for abortion in 2024
The Empty Grave of Comrade Bishop: ‘We all had great expectations’
The Empty Grave of Comrade Bishop: ‘Somebody knows’
A family torn apart by a Trump-era policy
Why the U.S. gives so much aid to Israel
A night with the rat hunters
The “second phase” of Israel’s war with Gaza
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Daily
The 7
Consider This from NPR
Today, Explained
WSJ Tech News Briefing