The Day

Netanyahu slams Israeli media as ‘fake news’ in defiant speech

- By DAVID WAINER

Tel Aviv, Israel — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, facing mounting legal troubles that could force him from office, gave a defiant speech to thousands of supporters Wednesday in which he accused “left-wing” Israeli media of trying to topple his government through a campaign aimed at pressuring the attorney general to indict him.

Echoing President Donald Trump, Netanyahu accused the media establishm­ent of purveying “fake news” to topple a right-wing government. After months of questionin­g witnesses in at least four separate cases, Israeli police this month signed a plea bargain with Netanyahu’s former chief of staff, Ari Harow, who will now aid the probes. For months, Israeli television channels and newspapers have been publishing revelation­s regarding the probes into Netanyahu’s alleged wrongdoing, and predicting his downfall.

“Their purpose is a government­al coup,” Netanyahu said to thousands of supporters of his Likud Party in Tel Aviv. “Their goal is to apply unrelentin­g pressure on law enforcemen­t agents so that they’ll serve an indictment at all costs, without taking into account the truth or justice.”

Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving prime minister after founding father David Ben-Gurion, would likely face intense pressure to resign — although he wouldn’t be obligated to — if the attorney general eventually decides to indict him. In his most extensive comments to date on the investigat­ions, Netanyahu sought to steer the debate away from whether he has committed unlawful acts to one about right versus left, arguing that his opponents would let up if only he would agree to cede territorie­s to the Palestinia­ns.

He ended his speech with what has become his trademark retort to the accusation­s against him: “There will be nothing, because there is nothing.”

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