Most Americans Say Trump Broke the Law, Yet His Support Keeps Rising
The source package centers on a polling headline saying most Americans believe Donald Trump violated the law, even as his support continues to climb. It does not provide the poll’s exact figures in the supplied text, only the broad finding and the contrast between public opinion on legality and his political strength.
The rest of the text is a list of Hebrew news, opinion, and culture items from the same outlet. Among them are reports that Qatar held secret talks with Iran during the war to protect a major gas facility, that a senior American official said there was an agreement on how uranium would be removed and that he was confident Israel would be persuaded, and that daily life in Iran has become unbearable while some there are fantasizing about what comes after the current era.
Other highlighted items include reporting on contradictory signals from Trump toward Iran about whether to attack, testimonies from Iranian women who moved to the United States saying the administration wants to deport them to the Central African Republic, and a report that the woman who accused Boaz Bismuth of assault was photographed bruised after the meeting.
The page also mentions an analysis of a 1977 campaign poster as a dark prophecy, a new election column, commentary on the turnout at the polls, criticism of a published photo of former IDF intelligence chief Aharon Haliva, a restaurant review, an opinion piece by Gideon Levy calling Benjamin Netanyahu a mass murderer, and a book review describing a crucial document for understanding Israel in recent years.