Luma Simms is a Fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center; her essays, articles, and book reviews have appeared in a variety of publications including National Affairs, Law and Liberty, The Wall Street Journal, National Review, First Things, Public Discourse, the Institute for Family Studies, and others.

Could Netanyahu’s Corruption Case Scupper His Re-election Chances?

Benjamin Netanyahu has made some of Israel’s foreign enemies his friends, but he’s finding it difficult to do the same domestically.

India’s prime minister Narendra Modi visited Israel in July 2017, the first Indian representative to do so since the two countries first established a diplomatic relations in 1992. Netanyahu returned the gesture by visiting India in January 2018, when the two leaders spoke of a future together that would benefit both countries. In January 2019, Prime Minister Netanyahu re-established diplomatic relations with Chad as part of his effort to pursue diplomatic ties with African states. And just a couple of weeks ago, on January 2, 2020, Netanyahu signed an accord with Greece’s prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis and Cyprus’s president Nicos Anastasiades to construct a natural gas pipeline linking Israel, Greece and Cyprus to the European market via Italy.

Read the rest of the article at The Spectator USA

The Need For a Humane Immigration Debate

Persecution, True and False