Not quiet in the Likud:
After the leaks from the faction meetings, MK Yuval Steinitz told Israel Today: The leaks after every faction meeting of the party are a bad thing. "It is immoral to undermine trust between human beings. It is immoral to record a human being without his knowledge. I have never done it and I also expect others not to do it."
Miri Regev, who expressed opposition to supporting the coalition's "Dimensions for Studies" law at the faction meeting at noon yesterday, said: "On cases of rape because everyone understands that it is the rationale. But all the time a decision is made, and then they ask 'why not with the soldiers?'"
"We have decided that we are a militant opposition."
MK Miri Regev (Archive), Photo: Hadas Porush
Things provoked a lot of criticism of Regev.
Orit Soliciano, director general of the Association of Centers for Assistance to Victims and Victims of Sexual Assault: "The meaning of MK Regev's remarks is appalling. When a man who was injured had to answer "How did you let this happen", her stomach does not hurt? When there is no place to test a rape drug, her stomach does not hurt? When sex offenders are released with service jobs, her stomach does not hurt? Mental, does not her stomach hurt? "Our stomach actually hurts a lot at the words of MK Regev."
Regev commented on the recordings: "I have nothing to apologize for, the one who should apologize is the one who out of a faction meeting did a very serious act: he both recorded and transferred half things, and took things out of context."
In addition, this morning the "Israel Today" published a recording of a meeting of the Likud faction that preceded the decision not to overthrow the "Dimensions for Studies" law.
Opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu told participants in the meeting, in light of the leak from the meeting at noon: "I suggest you therefore control your language."
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