Israel Hayom via JNS
By Danielle Roth-Avneri
The Yamina and New Hope party leaders are “dangerous” as they have burned all their bridges by “deceiving” everyone that voted for them, says Likud lawmaker May Golan
A Likud lawmaker on Sunday compared the leaders of Israel’s Yamina and New Hope parties to suicide bombers, saying that the fact they had burned their political bridges in the effort to oust Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made them “dangerous.”
“The public leaders that are most dangerous are those who have nowhere to return to, and [Yamina head] Naftali Bennett and [New Hope leader] Gideon Sa’ar have nowhere to return to,” said Likud Knesset member May Golan during an interview on the Knesset Channel.
Although noting that their were “a thousand thousand differences” between the two cases, she said, “I compare [Bennett and Sa’ar] today to suicide bombers.”
When the presenters interjected to ask whether she didn’t think the comparison went too far, Golan insisted it did not.
“I am comparing them in this way—although there are a thousand thousand differences—because they are like terrorists who no longer believe in anything, embark on that suicide mission and, even if they know they face a death sentence, it doesn’t interest them,” she said.
When the presenters asked Golan to take back her remarks, she refused and doubled down.
“I will not take it back,” she said, adding, “They have decided to die with the Philistines,” a reference to the biblical story of Samson.
“They are on a suicide mission, and they don’t care what happens in the end. They want to commit suicide. They know they have nowhere to go back to. That’s what Bennett and Gideon Sa’ar are doing, and these are the people we are putting at the head of our state today. I won’t take these words back,” she said.
It’s not just our right-wing public they’re deceiving, they’re deceiving every single person who voted for them,” Golan said.
The Likud lawmaker’s remarks came one day after Israel Security Agency Director Nadav Argaman warned that rising incitement, especially on social media, could potentially lead to politically-motivated violence.
This article first appeared in Israel Hayom.
Caption: Likud lawmaker May Golan speaks for the first time at the Plenary Hall at the Knesset, Israel's Parliament, in Jerusalem, on May 14, 2019.
Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash90.