As the US leans into the likely dethroning of Trump, Israel sees it as pretty much a done deal, sparking laments from Trump backers here and predictions of what it may mean
Israelis may not be able to vote, but they are not shy about telling Americans who they should cast their ballots for an election widely viewed here as the MOST IMPORTANT EVER
Israel is watching the US election with lurid fascination, but it also has enough skin in the game that at least some are showing signs of hedging their pro-Trump bets
Parents rejoice as kids finally get shipped back to school, giving them some peace (and maybe an infection too), and reports on the US vote focus on the Israeli expat demographic
An Israel still smarting from the deadly results of its own divisions peers across the sea to a polarized America as it tries to gauge who will be president and what it could mean
In Israel, you can't please any of the people any of the time. Or at least that's how it seems, with lockdown exit plans buffeted by criticism from all sides
Local authorities and pundits put on a clinic for the government to learn how to think outside the classroom, and the comptroller releases a damning, but not damning enough, report
A half-time solution for first and second grades in lieu of pods is widely pilloried for not letting the little people have a say, and a Zoom shouting match goes viral
Peace with Sudan is all but agreed to, and Israelis are both trying to explain why this one is really the big one while already looking to their next normalization conquest
The coalition's attempt to mulligan a vote heralds the end of democracy and maybe the Joint List; meanwhile, Trump-stumping in Israel Hayom hits new highs (or lows)
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