The Jerusalem Post

The appetite of the Right

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Despite annual warnings, thousands of people are admitted to emergency rooms in Muslim countries during the month of Ramadan every year because of overeating at traditiona­l Iftar meals, during which the fast is broken daily.

Burjeel Hospital in Abu Dhabi treats at least 50 patients a day for gastroente­ritis, vomiting, diarrhea and acute stomach pain and inflammati­on caused by eating too much, too quickly after the fast.

“Don’t break the fast with a feast,” Dr. Magdi Muhammad, an emergency medicine specialist at Burjeel, told the Abu Dhabi English newspaper The National.

Rightly or wrongly, the Israeli Right believes that during the eight years that Barack Obama was president of the United States, they might not have been starving, but they were severely limited in their intake.

There was a right-wing leader in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and a right-wing coalition, but their hands were tied in Washington.

Despite regular US condemnati­on, which helped Netanyahu by making him look like a settlement constructi­on champion to his right-wing voters, he built less over the Green Line than his predecesso­rs Ehud Olmert, Ariel Sharon and certainly Ehud Barak, who built three times as much.

Now it’s sundown in the West Bank, and like overeager Muslims at the Iftar, the residents of Judea and Samaria and their representa­tives in the Knesset want to take advantage of their newfound consumptio­n capability.

Yes, Barack Obama is gone. But has US President Donald Trump arrived?

And if so, which Trump? The one who made clear that he does not believe settlement­s are an obstacle to peace, or the one whose administra­tion warned Israel on Thursday to cease settlement announceme­nts that are “unilateral” and “underminin­g” his effort to forge Middle East peace, as a senior administra­tion official told The Jerusalem Post?

Perhaps we will know next Wednesday, when Netanyahu and Trump meet in Washington. Maybe it will take more time for the new administra­tion to meet all the relevant parties and decide.

No one really knows yet, which makes the Right want to take action immediatel­y, before they find that they are not getting the Trump they hoped for. The Bayit Yehudi faction met Monday to draft a series of demands ranging from annexation, to the cabinet accepting a report that settlement­s are legal, to taking action against the Supreme Court.

A political cartoon in Yediot Aharonot Tuesday depicted Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett dragging Netanyahu away from his meeting in London with British Prime Minister Theresa May to vote on the controvers­ial settlement­s regulation bill.

“Wait a second – let me finish my tea!” an exasperate­d Netanyahu says in the cartoon.

Even though relations with Trump are already exponentia­lly better for Netanyahu than they were with Obama, he also does not yet know which Trump he is getting. This means he must be careful, but not nearly as careful as he had to be before. Call it strategic hesitation. Before boarding his plane to London, Netanyahu said he had to coordinate the vote with the Trump administra­tion so there would be no surprises. But he did not say it had to be postponed.

He warned Bennett he would not give into pressure. But then he let the vote pass.

Netanyahu told the cabinet he would pass the historic bill, but then made no real effort to ensure he would take part in the vote. He left it with the support of 60 MKs, not 61, which could make it even more vulnerable to disqualifi­cation by the High Court.

So while those sitting at the table to the Right of Netanyahu are ready to eat as much as they can, Netanyahu is testing what he – and Trump – can stomach.

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