Jerusalem – Israel TV Station’s Troubles Reflect A Larger Political Battleground

    4

    FILE - View of the Channel 10 newsroom. October 18, 2007. Photo by Moshe Shai/FLASH90Jerusalem – An Israeli television station reported last spring on numerous trips Benjamin Netanyahu had taken as an elected official to Paris, London and New York before becoming prime minister in 2009. Accompanied by his wife, he flew first class and stayed in baronial hotel suites. Mrs. Netanyahu had her hair styled and her wardrobe dry-cleaned. The bills, displayed on screen, were paid for by wealthy friends.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    Traveling in luxury at the expense of others may violate public service rules and the law. It also doesn’t look good. But instead of accolades for its journalism, Channel 10 is now fighting for its life, and Mr. Netanyahu’s hostility toward it is being cast as part of a broader cultural and political war in Israel between the left and the right involving efforts to control the judiciary, the reporting of news and public discourse.

    It is a battle that most immediately pits the rightist governing coalition against the liberal elite as the government refuses to postpone the station’s debt, which could force it to close.

    “The fight over Channel 10 is partly a matter of revenge – Netanyahu wants to make them pay for what they did to him,” argued Nachman Shai, a member of Parliament from the opposition party Kadima and a former news executive who helped set up Channel 10 a decade ago. “But it is also part of a three-front struggle – over the courts, civil society and the media. The right wants to control every institution. Freedom of expression is at risk.”

    Those around Mr. Netanyahu, who filed a million-dollar libel suit against the station, say Channel 10 is a failed business whose payments have been forgiven numerous times and is hiding behind political complaints and inflated concerns about free speech to make the public absorb its debts.

    Full story at The NY Times


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    4 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    cbdds
    cbdds
    12 years ago

    Lots of people fly business and first class, usually not at their expense. I recently flew Europe to TLV on EL AL and there was a person from the sochnut that basically commuted weekly at Government expense. There is a respect issue that a leader must dress the part and play the part. note the disrespect that Peter Falk was given in Columbo. While the disheveled image woks in TV shows the real world works differently.
    Criticize Netanyahu for other reasons.

    MosheM
    MosheM
    12 years ago

    It’s just this leftist failed business that wants a bailout and is using garbage arguments against it closing like any other failed business.

    chesed72
    chesed72
    12 years ago

    Its about time the right does something effective to this leftist media in israel. I hope they succeed in shutting them down 1 by 1.

    HolyMoe
    HolyMoe
    12 years ago

    A few hundred leftists control the media, judiciary and academia in Israel.
    It’s time to break this stranglehold.
    They are destroying Israel and will be the first to jump ship if the going gets tough.
    Most of their children live in America and Europe, anyway.
    Let’s hope Netanyahu succeeds in driving them out as well.