President Isaac Herzog of Israel has clarified that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s pardon request remains under proper legal review, pushing back against characterizations from Donald Trump who suggested Herzog’s approach was disgraceful and worthy of condemnation.
Herzog’s office issued a detailed statement Thursday explaining that the Ministry of Justice is currently preparing a formal legal opinion on the pardon application according to established procedures. The presidential team emphasized that Herzog will consider the request only after this legal analysis is complete and will make his determination strictly in accordance with Israeli law, without influence from external or internal political pressures.
Trump’s criticism emerged during a White House press conference conducted while Netanyahu was in Washington for diplomatic meetings. The former American president used harsh language to condemn Herzog’s handling of the pardon request, stating that he “should be ashamed of himself” and suggesting that Israeli citizens should publicly shame their president. The remarks represented an extraordinary intervention in another country’s domestic legal processes.
The criminal cases facing Netanyahu involve serious allegations of corruption across three active prosecutions. Two cases center on claims that Netanyahu engineered deals with Israeli media companies, trading government regulatory decisions for favorable news coverage of himself and his administration. The third case involves accusations that he accepted extravagant gifts valued at more than $260,000 from billionaire associates, including luxury cigars, premium champagne, and expensive jewelry, allegedly in exchange for political favors.
As the first serving Israeli prime minister to face criminal trial, Netanyahu has become a central figure in ongoing debates about political accountability and corruption. The proceedings, which began in 2019, have been consistently characterized by Netanyahu as a “political trial” orchestrated by his opponents to undermine his leadership. Despite maintaining his innocence throughout all cases, Netanyahu faces three ongoing prosecutions after a fourth charge was previously dismissed. The current pardon controversy emerged following Trump’s October speech to the Knesset, where he publicly urged Herzog to grant clemency, leading to the formal submission of a pardon request by Netanyahu’s legal team.
Israeli President Herzog Resists External Pressure in Netanyahu Pardon Deliberations
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