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  • US rights group calls on UN to impose arms embargo on UAE

    US rights group calls on UN to impose arms embargo on UAE

    A Washington-based pro-democracy organization, Democracy for the Arab World Now (Dawn), has issued a urgent global appeal demanding United Nations member states implement an immediate, full arms embargo on the United Arab Emirates, accusing the Gulf state of enabling mass atrocities in Sudan that UN investigations have formally classified as genocide through its sustained backing of the Rapid Support Forces.

    The call for action comes exactly one week after a UN independent fact-finding mission issued a stark warning that ongoing human rights law violations and targeted attacks on critical infrastructure in the Sudanese city of el-Obeid mirror the brutal campaign that devastated el-Fasher, urging the international community to act before another large-scale atrocity unfolds. “The international community still has a window of opportunity to prevent further atrocity crimes,” stated Mona Rishmawi, a member of the expert fact-finding mission. “El Obeid must not become the next crime scene.”

    To back its claims, Dawn cites evidence collected by a UN panel of experts that mapped cross-border supply corridors linked to the UAE, which channel weapons, armored vehicles, and fuel into Sudan through the borders of Chad and Libya. The organization also references published analysis from Amnesty International that documents the RSF’s use of UAE-manufactured armored personnel carriers, as well as UAE-re-exported Chinese ordnance from Norinco, including precision GB50A guided bombs and 155mm AH-4 howitzers.

    “The evidence of [the] UAE’s support for abusive actors in Sudan is overwhelming,” said Omar Shakir, Dawn’s executive director. “The UAE is the principal external sponsor of a force that a UN fact-finding mission has found committed acts of genocide. No legal framework, international or domestic, can justify continued arms transfers to the UAE.”

    Sudan’s brutal civil conflict, which pits the RSF against the country’s formal Sudanese Armed Forces, erupted in April 2023. Over the course of the conflict, an estimated tens of thousands of people have been killed, more than 13 million have been displaced from their homes, and over 19.5 million Sudanese civilians are now on the brink of catastrophic famine, according to UN humanitarian data.

    Both the UAE and the RSF have repeatedly denied the allegations of military support. In a statement provided to Middle East Eye, the Emirati foreign ministry stated: “The UAE has not provided and is not providing military or financial support to any warring party in Sudan.”

    Dawn grounds its legal argument for UAE complicity in the 1948 Genocide Convention and established international law precedent. Citing Article 16 of the International Law Commission’s Articles on State Responsibility — a standard applied by the International Court of Justice in the 2007 Bosnia v Serbia case on genocide complicity, and classified as a punishable offense under Article III(e) of the Genocide Convention — Dawn argues the UAE bears shared legal responsibility for ongoing genocide in Sudan. The organization also notes that third-party states that continue to supply arms to the UAE, with full knowledge that those weapons will be transferred to the RSF, risk being deemed equally complicit in the atrocities.

    As part of its campaign, Dawn has formally contacted five major arms-supplying states with direct leverage over the UAE: the United States, which supplies approximately 54 percent of the UAE’s total arms imports; France, which accounts for 13 percent; the United Kingdom and China, whose weapon components and re-exported munitions are regularly recovered from RSF-held areas; and Italy, which already revoked licenses for missile and bomb exports to the UAE in 2021 under its own national arms export regulations. Dawn is calling on all five states to immediately halt all direct arms transfers, re-export authorizations, and security cooperation with the UAE until it ends its backing for the RSF, and has urged the four permanent UN Security Council members among the group to uphold their binding legal obligations under international law.

    Dawn representatives are scheduled to meet with officials from each of the five governments in Washington D.C. to advance the campaign for a global arms embargo and adherence to international law. Beyond unilateral national action, Dawn is pushing the UN General Assembly to invoke the Uniting for Peace procedure to pass a formal resolution condemning the UAE’s conduct as a violation of the UN Charter, the global Arms Trade Treaty, and the long-standing Darfur arms embargo. The organization is also calling on the UN Security Council to refer the entire Sudan situation to the International Criminal Court for prosecution, and to expand the existing Darfur arms embargo to cover all of Sudan, with explicit provisions targeting external state actors that enable the conflict.

    “We understand that we live in a world where the rule of law has been eroded and international law has been disregarded,” Raed Jarrar, Dawn’s advocacy director, told Middle East Eye. Addressing the governments that hold the power to implement the embargo, he added: “At least respect your own domestic law that prohibits supporting genocide.”

    In the United States specifically, Dawn is calling on Congress to pass three joint resolutions of disapproval (S.J.Res. 51, 52, and 54) that would block pending planned arms sales to the UAE, as well as the Stand Up for Sudan Act, which would enshrine a permanent ban on US arms sales to the UAE until it verifiably ends all support for the RSF. The campaign also highlights the urgent need to close a long-standing emergency waiver loophole in the US Arms Export Control Act, which currently allows the executive branch to bypass standard congressional review processes to push through unvetted weapons sales.

    The political timeline for action in Washington is unusually favorable, after former US Secretary of State Antony Blinken formally confirmed in January 2025 that the RSF and its leader, Mohammad Hamdan Dagalo Mousa (widely known as Hemedti), have perpetrated a genocide in Sudan. Despite this formal declaration, a major policy contradiction remains: the US maintains close military and strategic partnerships with the UAE, and just last month, on July 10, the US Department of Commerce upgraded the UAE’s status under US Export Administration Regulations, significantly easing export controls on advanced weapons, commercial satellites, and spacecraft.

    Jarrar warned that failing to align US policy with its own formal genocide finding would be a historic mistake. “The government is going to be embarrassing itself by making a declaration about the RSF committing genocide in Sudan, and then, at the same time, continuing to support the main backer of genocide,” Jarrar said.

    The campaign comes amid a shifting global geopolitical context, as the incoming Trump administration has recently announced it will launch a campaign to dismantle the International Criminal Court “brick-by-brick” — a move widely interpreted as retaliation for the ICC’s recent issuance of an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

    Middle East Eye attempted to contact the Sudanese Permanent Mission to the United Nations and the office of the UN General Assembly president for comment, but received no response prior to publication. A spokesperson for the UN secretary general noted that Secretary General António Guterres has repeatedly and publicly condemned all foreign interference in Sudan’s ongoing conflict, while the UN 1591 Sudan Sanctions Committee declined to provide comment for this story.

    Dawn, the organization leading the campaign, was founded in 2018 by prominent Saudi dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post and Middle East Eye columnist who was assassinated by Saudi state agents inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October 2018.

  • ‘Textbook infringement’: Palestine advocacy groups sue for immediate halt to Trump’s ICC sanctions

    ‘Textbook infringement’: Palestine advocacy groups sue for immediate halt to Trump’s ICC sanctions

    On Wednesday, two prominent U.S.-based organizations advocating for Palestinian rights took legal action in a New York federal court, asking for an injunction to halt the Trump administration’s aggressive enforcement of sanctions against any individuals or groups that engage with the International Criminal Court (ICC).

    The plaintiffs in the case are Democracy for the Arab World Now (DAWN), an organization founded by assassinated Saudi-American journalist Jamal Khashoggi, and the Taxpayer Alliance Against Genocide (TAAG). The groups moved quickly to file suit following a provocative opinion piece published earlier this week by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, in which he openly threatened to dismantle the international tribunal “brick by brick.”

    Early in his current presidential term, Donald Trump signed Executive Order 14203, which grants federal officials broad authority to impose economic sanctions on any foreign national that supports ICC probes into alleged war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide committed by U.S. and Israeli citizens. The order also codified a new federal criminal offense, penalizing any person that provides or receives a “service” to or from a sanctioned individual or entity. The Trump administration has framed the ICC’s investigations as a national emergency, arguing the court has no legal jurisdiction over acts committed by U.S. and Israeli personnel during armed conflict.

    Washington’s fraught relationship with the ICC dates back decades. While the U.S. played a role in the court’s early founding and signed the landmark Rome Statute in 2000 under the Bill Clinton administration, it never submitted the treaty to the U.S. Senate for ratification, driven by longstanding fears that the tribunal could prosecute U.S. military personnel and government officials for alleged war crimes committed during the conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    To date, the Trump administration has used the sweeping powers of Executive Order 14203 to sanction multiple ICC prosecutors and judges, as well as three leading Palestinian human rights groups: al-Haq, al-Mezan, and the Palestinian Centre for Human Rights. In a high-profile move that drew widespread international condemnation, the administration also sanctioned Francesca Albanese, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on human rights in the occupied Palestinian territories.

    In a public statement outlining the lawsuit, DAWN warned that the vague, overbroad wording of the executive order puts the organization and TAAG at severe risk of civil and even criminal penalties. Because the term “service” can be interpreted by the government to cover almost any activity that provides a benefit to a recipient, routine advocacy work that many rights groups conduct could become illegal. For example, DAWN noted it could face legal consequences for submitting an amicus brief to the ICC encouraging investigations into potential crimes, or even simply sharing evidence and analysis with sanctioned Palestinian rights groups or with Albanese.

    Facing this pervasive legal threat, DAWN and TAAG — along with many other U.S.-based advocacy groups — have already been forced to censor their own work. Multiple organizations have paused all projects related to the ICC and cut off professional ties with the sanctioned Palestinian groups and Albanese, the statement added.

    Joe Pace, the lead attorney representing the two organizations, told reporters during a Wednesday press briefing that Trump’s sanctions regime is a “textbook infringement” on First Amendment protections for free speech. “The Constitution does not permit the government to pick and choose what topics American citizens can discuss amongst themselves or with foreign parties,” Pace emphasized.

    Rubio’s broad attack on the ICC has reinforced the view shared by many critics that the U.S. and its closest allies are waging an all-out diplomatic campaign against the tribunal specifically because it is moving to hold Israel accountable for alleged war crimes in Gaza. The military campaign in Gaza has been labeled a genocide by multiple United Nations human rights bodies, independent human rights organizations, and leading genocide scholars.

    In his opinion piece published by The Wall Street Journal on Monday, Rubio argued that the ICC’s investigation into actions by U.S. military and law enforcement personnel represents a dangerous overreach of the court’s authority. He claimed allowing the ICC to exercise jurisdiction over U.S. citizens would fundamentally undermine American sovereignty, writing “It would mean the death of the US as a sovereign and independent nation.”

    Rubio also released a pre-recorded monologue addressing the issue on the social platform X on Monday, where he claimed the court is attempting to strip U.S. citizens of their right to be tried under American law by a jury of their peers. “But today, powerful people in far away places want to take that away from us. They believe that they should be in charge of your laws, of your country, your life – and they don’t care whether or not you agree,” he said in the video. He added that American voters do not know the identities of the ICC’s judges, prosecutors, and leadership, and “they shouldn’t have to,” while repeating his accusation that the tribunal is waging a deliberate campaign against American sovereignty.

    Rubio claimed that opposition to the ICC’s activities enjoys bipartisan support in the U.S. The court was established in 2002 in response to mass atrocities and genocides in conflict zones including Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia. Notably, however, Rubio made no direct mention of the ICC’s outstanding arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant. The pair are wanted on charges of crimes against humanity committed during Israel’s ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which has killed more than 73,000 Palestinians since October 2023, according to local health authorities. The ICC also issued arrest warrants for three senior Hamas leaders for alleged war crimes committed during the group’s October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel; all three have since been assassinated by Israeli forces.

    DAWN, for its part, has a long history of submitting evidence and legal filings to the ICC. Past submissions include a 2022 filing calling for sanctions on the Israeli military’s ultranationalist Netzah Yehuda Battalion, a 2023 submission naming senior Israeli military commanders implicated in the ongoing Gaza campaign, and a 279-page filing in January 2025 asking the ICC prosecutor to open an investigation into former U.S. President Joe Biden and his top cabinet officials for aiding and abetting war crimes and genocide in Gaza.

  • China’s oil imports plunge 40 percent, keeping a lid on energy prices

    China’s oil imports plunge 40 percent, keeping a lid on energy prices

    As tensions between the United States and Iran flare up once again in the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz, a sharp drop in China’s crude oil imports has emerged as an unexpected factor keeping global energy prices from spiking out of control. New customs data released by China on Tuesday shows that the country’s total crude oil imports in June fell to 29.27 million tonnes, marking a 41% year-on-year decline. This import level is the lowest recorded by China since October 2016, hitting a multi-year low that has reverberated through global energy markets.

    As the world’s largest crude oil importer, China holds enormous sway over global energy pricing dynamics. Last year alone, the country imported an average of 11.6 million barrels of crude per day, a volume larger than the combined import volumes of France, the United Kingdom and Germany. Russia, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran and Brazil stand as China’s top five crude suppliers, and Beijing is also the primary export market for both Iranian and Saudi Arabian crude. Energy industry analysts confirm that Beijing built up large strategic crude stockpiles in advance of the recent escalation of conflict between the US and Iran, creating a buffer that allows it to cut back on near-term imports.

    Energy experts widely point to China’s steep import cutback as a primary reason that global energy prices have remained contained despite the return of open conflict in the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s busiest and most critical maritime chokepoints for global oil trade. Multiple factors have driven the sharp drop in Chinese crude imports, analysts note. A persistent post-pandemic economic slowdown across China has softened domestic energy demand, while the country has also increasingly substituted coal for crude to meet power generation needs. Recent customs data bears this out: China’s coal imports surged 30% in June to hit a five-month high, confirming the fuel shift underway.

    The current conflict in the Strait of Hormuz comes after a short period of de-escalation earlier this year. The US and Iran signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) that extended a spring ceasefire and opened the door to talks over Iran’s nuclear program and governance of the Strait. Under the terms of the deal, Iran received temporary sanctions relief in exchange for halting attacks on commercial vessels and allowing unimpeded transit through the waterway without mandatory tolls. In recent weeks, however, violence has reignited:

    Iran has launched attacks on commercial vessels from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates that were transiting the Strait through Omani territorial waters. Tehran claims the vessels failed to coordinate passage with Iranian authorities as required by the MoU, though the agreement does not mandate that vessels pass through Iran’s territorial waters. In response, the US has resumed escorting commercial vessels through the Strait, restarted direct strikes against Iranian targets, and reimposed a full naval blockade on Iranian ports and shipping as of Tuesday.

    Even with the resumption of conflict, global oil prices have only climbed modestly, rising from a recent low of $69 per barrel to $79 per barrel. According to market analysts, this limited increase has prevented the conflict from spilling over into broader disruption of the global economy. The muted price reaction also strips Iran of one of its key levers to force global policy shifts, while buying additional time for the US to continue its military campaign.

    The steady energy prices have also helped moderate US inflation. Just one month after the MoU was signed, US inflation fell, driven in large part by a drop in domestic gasoline prices. Even after a 30% overall increase from pre-conflict levels in February, when US national average gas prices stood at roughly $3 per gallon, prices fell by 10% in June according to the latest US inflation report, and currently sit at an average of $3.87 per gallon.

    The original reporting on this development was published by Middle East Eye, a media outlet that delivers independent, in-depth coverage of the Middle East, North Africa and global affairs connected to the region.

  • Corbyn slams Starmer for again claiming Labour was ‘institutionally antisemitic’

    Corbyn slams Starmer for again claiming Labour was ‘institutionally antisemitic’

    As outgoing United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer prepares to leave Downing Street, his predecessor as Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has publicly condemned Starmer for repeating a long-debunked false claim that Labour was “institutionally antisemitic” during Corbyn’s tenure at the party’s helm.

    The controversy erupted during Starmer’s final appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions (PMQs) on Wednesday, where he reflected on his political journey from opposition leader to the country’s top office. Recounting the aftermath of Labour’s 2019 general election defeat to Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party, Starmer claimed the loss “nearly broke my party” before adding: “We were found to be institutionally antisemitic. I picked up our party. I turned it round. I made a promise to rip antisemitism out of my party and I did.”

    In an immediate response to Starmer’s comments given exclusively to Middle East Eye (MEE), Corbyn pushed back forcefully against the inaccurate assertion. “The prime minister today falsely claimed that Labour was found to be ‘institutionally antisemitic’ under my leadership. There was no such finding, and Keir Starmer should have the decency to correct the record,” Corbyn said.

    The former Labour leader emphasized that this false allegation is not an isolated misstatement, but part of a repeated pattern of political distortion. “This is the second time in recent weeks he has made a false allegation about the Labour Party under my leadership (last time about an invented financial bankruptcy) to bolster his own dismal record,” he added.

    Corbyn, who now serves as parliamentary leader of the Your Party, argued that misleading claims and broken campaign promises have defined Starmer’s tenure as Labour leader, ultimately eroding public trust and leading directly to the premature end of his premiership. With Starmer already on track to leave office, Corbyn made clear his own political agenda will not slow down: “But I will continue to campaign for social justice, human rights and peace. That includes uncovering the true scale of this government’s institutional complicity in genocide.”

    Corbyn, a long-standing advocate for Palestinian rights, stepped down as Labour leader in 2019 following the party’s decisive general election loss. His four-and-a-half-year tenure was repeatedly marred by public allegations of widespread antisemitism within the party, a narrative that was amplified by internal factional infighting as rival groups battled for control of the party and establishment-aligned factions worked to undermine his left-wing leadership.

    Fact-checking Starmer’s recent claim confirms that the 2020 investigation into Labour antisemitism conducted by the UK’s equality watchdog, the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), never used the phrase “institutionally antisemitic” to describe Corbyn’s leadership. The EHRC report did document specific cases of harassment, unlawful discrimination, and inappropriate political interference in antisemitism complaint processes, and it concluded that Labour could have addressed the issue far more effectively if Corbyn’s leadership had prioritized reform. The “institutionally antisemitic” characterization actually originated from Alan Johnson, a figure affiliated with the pro-Israel lobbying group Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (Bicom), not from the official regulator’s findings.

    Long before the report’s 2020 publication, Corbyn had already questioned the EHRC’s institutional independence, telling MEE the body had been absorbed into the “government machine” and its autonomy stripped away by the then-governing Conservative Party for political purposes. Following the report’s release, Corbyn acknowledged that when he took party leadership in 2015, Labour’s internal processes for handling antisemitism complaints were outdated and unfit for purpose, adding that reform efforts had been intentionally blocked by obstructive senior party bureaucracy.

    That claim of internal obstruction was later vindicated by the 2022 Forde Report, which found that Labour staff members openly hostile to Corbyn’s leadership carried out deliberate efforts to undermine his agenda, including running a “secret operation” to divert 2019 general election campaign funds away from candidates loyal to Corbyn.

    In his 2020 statement following the EHRC report, Corbyn struck a balanced tone on the issue of antisemitism in Labour: “Anyone claiming there is no antisemitism in the Labour Party is wrong. Of course there is, as there is throughout society, and sometimes it is voiced by people who think of themselves as on the left. One antisemite is one too many, but the scale of the problem was also dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media. That combination hurt Jewish people and must never be repeated.”

  • Global coalition of lawyers launches campaign to defend the International Criminal Court

    Global coalition of lawyers launches campaign to defend the International Criminal Court

    A coalition of legal practitioners and human rights-focused legal organizations from around the globe has mobilized to protect the International Criminal Court (ICC), just days after the U.S. secretary of state publicly outlined plans by the Trump administration to dismantle the international judicial body piece by piece.

    On Monday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio laid out the administration’s aggressive stance in both an opinion piece and a video posted to the social platform X, saying the U.S. would deploy every government resource at its disposal and work alongside aligned allies to break down the ICC “brick by brick” if required. His public challenge to the court comes months after the ICC issued an arrest warrant for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over alleged crimes against humanity in Gaza.

    Rubio framed his opposition around claims of U.S. national sovereignty, arguing that the ICC’s attempts to investigate potential wrongdoing by U.S. military and law enforcement personnel represent an unacceptable overreach of the court’s mandate. He claimed that allowing the ICC to exercise jurisdiction over U.S. citizens would undermine core American legal principles, including the right to be tried by a jury of one’s peers under domestic law. In his video address, he went further, accusing the court of waging an ideological war against the U.S. and claiming unelected foreign officials were seeking to control American law and policy. Rubio also stressed that opposition to the court enjoys bipartisan support in the U.S., noting the longstanding U.S. skepticism of the body which was founded in 2002 to prosecute mass atrocities following genocides in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

    Notably absent from Rubio’s public remarks was any direct reference to the 2024 arrest warrants for Netanyahu and his former defense minister Yoav Gallant, who are accused of overseeing mass atrocities in Gaza that have killed more than 73,000 Palestinians since October 2023. The ICC also issued parallel arrest warrants for Hamas leaders over their alleged war crimes during the October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel; those leaders have since been assassinated by Israeli forces.

    The coalition’s defensive initiative emerged from the Second International Legal Conference, which concluded earlier this week in Istanbul, Turkey. The gathering brought together a diverse multinational group of sitting judges, practicing lawyers, international law scholars, academic experts, and representatives from legal and human rights organizations, all gathered under the official theme “Crimes of the Israeli Occupation in Palestine: Between Legal Accountability and Achieving Justice”.

    At the close of the conference, attendees formally launched the International Initiative to Defend the International Criminal Court and Its Judges, anchored by the Istanbul Declaration. In an official statement, the group emphasized that the work of international justice must remain fully independent from competing political interests and power-driven geopolitics. They warned that allowing political pressure to enable impunity for mass atrocities does more than erode the ICC’s credibility—it undermines the entire foundation of the international legal order and creates incentives for future violations of global law.

    The new initiative calls on bar associations, university departments of law, individual legal professionals, academic institutions, and civil society groups across every region to sign onto the Istanbul Declaration and join the collective effort. Its core stated goals are threefold: uniting global actors to uphold the rights of the Palestinian people, safeguarding the institutional and judicial independence of the international justice system, and enforcing accountability for serious violations of international law without political selectivity or double standards.

  • UK politicians call for sanctions on Israel as Starmer’s Gaza legacy slammed

    UK politicians call for sanctions on Israel as Starmer’s Gaza legacy slammed

    As the United Kingdom prepares for a change in its prime minister next week, more than 80 members of Parliament and members of the House of Lords have signed an open letter urging the government to implement sweeping, comprehensive sanctions against Israel, while a coalition of leading British humanitarian organizations has issued sharp criticism of outgoing Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s record on Palestinian rights.

    Organized by Labour Members of Parliament Imran Hussain and Richard Burgon, the letter addressed to UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper calls on the government to align its actions with the 2023 advisory opinion issued by the International Court of Justice (ICJ). This July 19 marks exactly two years since the ICJ ruled that Israel’s 56-year-long occupation of Palestinian territories is unlawful under international law, concluding that Israel’s near-total segregation of Palestinian communities in the occupied West Bank constitutes a breach of international prohibitions against racial segregation and apartheid.

    The cross-party group of signatories — which includes former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, Green Party Members of Parliament Sian Berry and Hannah Spencer, former New Labour cabinet minister Lord Peter Hain, and Jewish Kindertransport refugee Lord Alf Dubs — argues that two years on from the landmark ruling, Israel has only expanded its unlawful occupation. They point to a series of escalatory actions that have erased almost all remaining hope for a two-state solution: Israel currently controls more than 60 percent of the Gaza Strip, a territory it has left largely in ruins after three years of military campaign; it has launched expanded incursions into southern Lebanon and Syrian territory under the pretense of targeting Hezbollah; and it has ramped up annexationist policies in the West Bank. In September 2024, far-right Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who also serves as de facto governor of the occupied West Bank, unveiled a plan to annex 82 percent of the territory to Israel, a move built on the principle of seizing “maximum land with minimum [Palestinian] population” that would eliminate any possibility of a sovereign Palestinian state.

    “Israel’s actions over the past two years underline how, without much bolder action, the Israeli government will continue to simply ignore the words of condemnation from political leaders and governments and deepen its illegal occupation,” the letter reads. It notes that the ICJ has clearly established that all UN member states hold a legal obligation to recognize the illegality of Israel’s occupation and refrain from economic or trade activity that sustains it. Despite publicly acknowledging the court’s ruling, the letter argues, the British government has failed to take formal action to meet its binding legal and moral obligations. Drawing a contrast to the UK’s robust response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the politicians point out that London imposed widespread sanctions on Moscow for its violation of international law, but has refused to apply the same standard to Israel.

    The signatories outline a clear set of concrete demands: ban all trade with unlawful Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, sanction companies that profit from the occupation, implement targeted individual sanctions against Israeli officials responsible for expanding the occupation, suspend the existing UK-Israel bilateral trade agreement, and end all arms transfers to Israel — including the supply of components for F-35 fighter jets.

    Parallel to the politicians’ appeal, 17 major UK charities have also called on incoming Prime Minister Andy Burnham to take immediate action to end what they describe as Israel’s atrocities against Palestinian people. The coalition includes prominent organizations such as Save the Children UK, Medical Aid for Palestinians, Islamic Relief, and Amnesty International UK, who warned that Palestinians cannot afford any further delay or political inaction on the matter.

    In their statement, the charities delivered a scathing assessment of Starmer’s legacy on Palestine. “Despite a partial arms suspension in 2024, Keir Starmer’s government has continued to enable Israel’s atrocities against Palestinians, their families and children through the supply of F-35 fighter jet parts,” Save the Children UK said, adding that “History will remember your complicity.”

    John McDonnell, a Labour MP and former shadow chancellor who signed the politicians’ letter, emphasized that the incoming prime minister faces a clear moral and legal duty to act. “The Netanyahu government clearly believes it can act with impunity as it destroys any hope of a two-state solution with its total annexation of the West Bank,” McDonnell told Middle East Eye. “The hope is that the incoming prime minister recognises that the UK government has a duty to act.”

    Burnham, who is set to succeed Starmer in office next week, has already sought to distance himself from his predecessor’s approach, issuing a public apology for the Labour Party’s initial response to the conflict in Gaza. “I know many people feel that at the start of Israel’s military action in Gaza, my party didn’t get it right, and I am sorry about that. The response has too often not been good enough. We need to do better,” he said. Burnham acknowledged the “unbearable suffering” in Gaza, describing it as a “scar on our collective conscience,” and has called for increased pressure on the Israeli government to end its expansion of occupation. He has praised the outgoing Starmer administration for its limited steps — including formal recognition of Palestinian statehood, sanctions on a small number of far-right Israeli ministers, and a ban on the supply of British-produced bombs and bullets to Israel — but admitted that the UK was far too slow to call for a permanent ceasefire, and that a more robust approach is now needed.

    Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper has also softened her rhetoric in recent weeks, acknowledging that Labour’s early response to the Gaza crisis was misaligned with humanitarian concerns. But aid groups warn that a shift in tone does not guarantee meaningful policy change.

    Halla Keir, advocacy and research manager at Medical Aid for Palestinians, stressed that the urgency of the crisis leaves no room for further delay. “Every new prime minister inherits difficult decisions. But this should not be one of them,” Keir said. “Almost three years into Israel’s genocide in Gaza, the need for action could not be clearer. The UK’s obligations under international law are clear. What is needed now is the political courage to act.”

    Save the Children UK echoed this call, noting that “Nothing can change the horrors Palestinians have faced. But the next prime minister has an opportunity to put an end to the UK government’s role as an ally to atrocities.”

  • Israel approves over $400m to fund 34 settlements in occupied West Bank

    Israel approves over $400m to fund 34 settlements in occupied West Bank

    In a controversial move that has reignited global scrutiny of Israeli territorial policy, the Israeli government announced Tuesday it has formally approved a 1.3 billion shekel ($434 million) budget to construct 34 new settlements in the occupied West Bank. According to leading Israeli outlet Ynet, the budget approval was finalized by the country’s security cabinet back in June, but was intentionally kept secret for months over fears of pushback from the United States government. The foundational approval for the 34 settlements themselves was granted in a separate, unpublicized cabinet vote in March, with neither decision disclosed to the public until this week.

    With this latest authorization, the total number of settlements approved by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s current far-right government, which took office in late 2022, has climbed to 104. Alongside the new construction projects, the government also signed off on the re-establishment of the Sa-Nur settlement in the northern West Bank. This site was originally evacuated in 2005 as part of Israel’s disengagement from the Gaza Strip, but Israeli settlers have already returned to the location in recent months.

    Top government officials from the ruling far-right bloc have celebrated the decision as a landmark step in their planned expansion of Israeli control over the West Bank. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who also leads civilian oversight of the occupied West Bank through the Defense Ministry, spearheaded the budget measure and framed it as a core achievement of what his faction calls a “settlement revolution.” Smotrich described the approval as a critical security and strategic decision, tying the expansion to his long-stated goal of blocking the creation of an independent Palestinian state, which he referred to as a “terror state” that would threaten Israeli sovereignty. “We are passing, one after the other, budgetary decisions that fund roads, infrastructure, and now also buildings and caravans,” Smotrich said, confirming that construction on the new settlements would launch as early as this coming summer.

    Settlement Minister Orit Strook, a fellow member of Smotrich’s Religious Zionist party who resides in an existing West Bank settlement, went even further in praising the move, calling it “the greatest Zionist-settlement move since the establishment of the state.” Strook claimed that no comparable pro-settlement decision had been made in the entire history of the Zionist movement, adding that the government’s agenda aims to ensure “no point remains without a settlement” across the occupied territory.

    Just days earlier, Smotrich and Netanyahu signed a separate landmark umbrella agreement with the Samaria Regional Council, committing 8.5 billion shekels ($2.5 billion) to upgrade and expand infrastructure across the northern West Bank. Israeli daily Israel Hayom reported that this is the first time an Israeli government has formalized such a direct agreement with a regional settlement council. The deal allocates funding for 18 previously approved new settlements, the construction of roughly 12,000 additional homes in existing settlement blocs, and broad upgrades to local roads and public services.

    However, the settlement expansion push has drawn sharp criticism both from within Israel and from the international community. All Israeli settlements built in the West Bank are universally recognized as illegal under international law, a position formally upheld by the International Court of Justice and endorsed by the overwhelming majority of the global community. Domestic Israeli anti-settlement advocacy group Peace Now has lambasted the new measures, describing the recent 8.5 billion shekel infrastructure deal as “a fire sale of the State of Israel.” In a formal statement, the organization argued: “Not only is the government thumbing its nose at millions of Israelis and plundering their money for the benefit of a narrow settler sector – it is digging, with its own hands, the diplomatic and security pit in which the State of Israel may end up buried.”

    Earlier this month, Peace Now published a comprehensive report documenting the current government’s rapid acceleration of de facto annexation of the occupied West Bank. The report found that over the past three years, the government has approved more than 100 new settlements and formalized 185 unapproved settlement outposts. These outposts now exert control over more than 1.1 million dunams of land, equal to roughly 18 percent of the total area of the occupied West Bank. The report also added that Israeli settlers, backed by the Israeli military, have forcibly displaced 118 distinct Palestinian communities from their land in the territory to make way for expansion.

  • Lebanon’s Mitri says divisive Israel framework still lacks government approval

    Lebanon’s Mitri says divisive Israel framework still lacks government approval

    BEIRUT – Lebanon’s Deputy Prime Minister Tarek Mitri has stated in an exclusive interview with Middle East Eye that the current U.S.-brokered framework between Israel and Lebanon to end hostilities between Israel and Hezbollah is unworkable in its existing form, and cannot gain the status of a legally binding agreement without formal approval from Lebanon’s full Council of Ministers.

    Mitri clarified the distinct constitutional roles of Lebanon’s presidency and cabinet in international negotiation processes, noting that while the president holds the constitutional authority to negotiate on Lebanon’s behalf, all final agreements must receive cabinet approval before they take legal effect. To date, that step has not been completed, meaning the text agreed to by both parties in Washington on June 26 remains a non-binding starting point rather than a finalized deal.

    “The word agreement is nowhere to be seen in this text,” Mitri confirmed during the interview at his Beirut office.

    The U.S.-mediated framework, designed to map a path toward ending months of open conflict between Israel and the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah, has sparked widespread public and political opposition across Lebanon since it was signed. Critics have raised urgent questions about Lebanese national sovereignty, accountability for war crimes, and the framework’s structure that places Lebanon’s obligations ahead of Israel’s formal commitments.

    Hezbollah has publicly condemned the deal for failing to guarantee a full Israeli withdrawal from the roughly 6 percent of Lebanese territory that Israel continues to occupy, and for not securing the return of hundreds of thousands of displaced Lebanese residents to their homes in southern Lebanon.

    Mitri acknowledged that the current proposal does not meet all of Lebanon’s core demands, but framed it as an opening for future negotiation rather than a final settlement. “This is not the last word… It doesn’t meet all the desires and aspirations of the Lebanese. But this is a beginning,” he said, repeating that the text remains “not a solid, well-structured, final binding agreement.”

    He also conceded deep internal political divisions over the framework, noting that significant domestic outreach and negotiation will be required before any final deal can secure broad cross-political support within Lebanon. “You need to make sure that at the domestic level, although there might be disagreement, [a deal] should not exacerbate divisions and should not deepen already existing divisions,” he said.

    Mitri pointed to immediate public statements from Israeli leaders following the framework’s release as clear evidence of its weaknesses, demonstrating that Israel also does not view itself as bound by the text. “Twenty-four hours after the trilateral framework was made public… Netanyahu, the foreign minister, the defence minister said, ‘We’re staying in southern Lebanon. We’re not withdrawing,’” he recalled. Israel’s refusal to publicly commit to a full withdrawal from southern Lebanon directly contradicts Lebanon’s non-negotiable core demands, which also include the return of displaced residents and the release of Lebanese prisoners held by Israel, he added.

    The current conflict, which opened when Hezbollah launched rocket strikes on Israel on March 2 following the U.S.-Israeli killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, has evolved into “a war that Lebanon did not want, did not seek,” Mitri said, emphasizing that what began as a confrontation between Israel and Hezbollah has become a full-scale war on the Lebanese state and people.

    Lebanese authorities confirm that Israeli airstrikes and ground operations have killed more than 4,300 people since the war began in March. A recent assessment from the United Nations Development Program found that more than 11,000 buildings across southern Lebanon have been completely destroyed by Israeli attacks, with a further 2,200 structures partially damaged. “When the war started in Lebanon, it looked like a battleground between Israel and Hezbollah. But Israel has made a war on Lebanon,” Mitri said. “And there are many parts of Lebanon where Hezbollah had no military activity that were severely affected.”

    Addressing widespread criticism of Article 13 of the framework – a provision that suspends mutual legal and political action between the two sides during ongoing negotiations, which Lebanese human rights and legal experts warn could shield Israel from accountability for alleged war crimes – Mitri pushed back against concerns that the article would permanently end Lebanon’s efforts to document and pursue legal action for Israeli attacks.

    As chair of Lebanon’s National Commission on International Humanitarian Law, Mitri confirmed that the state’s ongoing work to document war crimes has not stopped, and “cannot be stopped” by the provisions of Article 13. He noted that Lebanon has never brought formal proceedings against Israel before an international court for a range of historical reasons, pointing out that neither country is a signatory to the Rome Statute that governs the International Criminal Court. Even so, evidence collected by the commission remains available for Lebanese citizens seeking to bring cases against Israel before foreign courts that exercise universal jurisdiction, he said.

    Mitri added that Lebanese officials have received formal assurances that Article 13 does not permanently end legal action against Israel. “We were told that although the word ‘cessation’ is used… it only means suspension,” he said, noting that pausing legal proceedings during active negotiations is a common practice in international peace processes, including the post-apartheid settlement in South Africa and the Algerian peace process.

    One of the most sensitive political issues facing the Lebanese government in the wake of any ceasefire will be the question of disarming Hezbollah and extending full state control over all weapons and territory across the country. Shortly after Hezbollah opened hostilities in March, the Lebanese government banned the group from conducting any independent military activities. Last year, the cabinet instructed the Lebanese army to draft plans for Hezbollah’s disarmament, a move that sparked fears of domestic armed conflict even as top officials including the president and prime minister emphasized they do not seek a military confrontation with the group. Earlier this year, Middle East Eye reported deep tensions between Prime Minister Nawaf Salam and army chief Rodolphe Haykal over disagreements on how to implement the disarmament ban, with unconfirmed sources indicating Salam considered sacking Haykal for refusing to confront Hezbollah during the ongoing war.

    Mitri argued that disarming Hezbollah is fundamentally a political issue, not a military one, rejecting calls for the Lebanese army to confront the group by force to establish state authority. “Disarming Hezbollah is not a technical question,” he said. “It’s not about the military balance of power between the army and Hezbollah’s military structure – it’s first and foremost political.” He noted that there has been little substantive discussion of the issue over the past several months, as open war makes domestic dialogue extremely difficult, but added that negotiations on the question are inevitable, and it must remain an internal Lebanese affair. When asked whether Israel is intentionally seeking to provoke a confrontation between the Lebanese army and Hezbollah, Mitri said: “Possibly the Israelis would be happy if that happens. But I think neither the army nor Hezbollah are willing to fall into the trap of fighting each other.” He noted that the pilot deployment zones outlined in the current framework can serve as a “litmus test” for the army to expand state authority gradually, while allowing Hezbollah to step back without triggering internal armed conflict.

    The current conflict marks the third major confrontation between Israel and Hezbollah since the 33-day 2006 war, which ended with a UN-brokered ceasefire that kept the border largely calm for nearly 18 years. Comparing the current diplomatic context to the 2006 negotiations, Mitri noted that Lebanon is now operating in a drastically shifted global landscape, where the UN Security Council and multilateral diplomacy have been sidelined. “The only party that can mediate, or at least allow for mediation under its auspices, is the United States of America,” he said.

    This reality has left Beirut with little choice but to engage with Washington, despite decades of deep mutual distrust, Mitri explained. Lebanon has long been “a footnote” in U.S. regional policy, he said, but Lebanese officials see a current “window of attention” that they are determined to leverage. He added that some political observers see recent comments from U.S. Vice President JD Vance – who suggested that Washington’s unconditional support for Israel should not be taken for granted – as a potential sign of a gradual shift in U.S. policy toward the region. “The main reason why the Lebanese look towards the United States is… that the US is the only country that has leverage over Israel and can help in resolving the present difficult issues we face,” he said.

    Mitri also emphasized that Israel’s strategic objectives have grown far more ambitious since the 2006 war, pointing to repeated public statements from Israeli leaders outlining a new military doctrine focused on “reclaiming deterrence” by establishing permanent security buffer zones in Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. “Now we are in a totally different, more difficult situation,” he said. “We’re left with very few options.”

    Looking beyond the immediate conflict, Mitri noted growing regional interest in building a new architecture of coordination and strategic alignment among regional states including Syria, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey, extending beyond narrow security arrangements. He pointed to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s long-held view that regional security is deeply interconnected, with Turkey’s security tied to Syria’s, and Syria’s security tied to Lebanon’s.

    Mitri stressed that Syria is far more than just a neighbor and ally to Lebanon; the two countries’ futures are “inextricably intertwined.” Addressing recent reports that U.S. President Donald Trump asked Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa to intervene militarily against Hezbollah, Mitri said Syria’s new leadership has shown no interest in reviving the decades of interference in Lebanese affairs that marked the former Assad regime. Al-Sharaa has publicly denied any plans to take military action against Hezbollah, and Mitri confirmed: “We know that with the present Syrian government, there is no hegemonic design over Lebanon.” Damascus is willing to support Lebanon through diplomatic and political means instead, he added.

    Mitri also rejected claims that Lebanese President Joseph Aoun holds reservations about Syria’s new leadership, despite the fact that neither president has yet conducted an official visit to the other’s capital. “I have not sensed any major reason why the visits… did not take place,” he said, explaining that trust is still being rebuilt after decades of mutual suspicion and Syrian political dominance over Lebanon. “This is all changing and it takes time for the population of both countries to realise that we’re in a totally different dispensation.”

    Despite years of catastrophic economic collapse, persistent political turmoil, and repeated cycles of war, Mitri said he does not believe Lebanon’s national unity and sovereignty face an imminent existential threat. He did acknowledge that deep-rooted sectarian loyalties and communal tensions remain present across the country, creating a widespread sense of social estrangement. While he warned that Lebanon’s future as a unified state depends on successfully resolving the current crisis, he stopped short of ruling out all risk of fragmentation. “Lebanon’s unity is always in the making,” he said, adding that fragmentation will only occur “unless we were unable to manage the present crisis and dissipate the present fears.”

  • Epstein ‘mistakes’ and Trump ties: Key takeaways from Todd Blanche’s confirmation hearing

    Epstein ‘mistakes’ and Trump ties: Key takeaways from Todd Blanche’s confirmation hearing

    Acting United States Attorney General Todd Blanche faced his first round of Senate confirmation questions this week, as he vies for a permanent appointment to the nation’s highest law enforcement role. The hearing came on the heels of a series of political upheavals: former AG Pam Bondi was dismissed by President Donald Trump amid widespread backlash over the Justice Department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein document release, and a federal judge had just voided a controversial tax settlement between Trump, his business empire and his family, and the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) a day before Blanche took the hot seat. Throughout the session, lawmakers from both parties pressed Blanche on three core contentious issues: his longstanding professional ties to Trump, the fate of the scrapped IRS settlement, and ongoing missteps in the Epstein files release. Below are the five most significant moments from the high-stakes hearing.

    First, Blanche addressed persistent questions over whether he would maintain independent control of the Justice Department, separate from the political interests of the president who appointed him. Ahead of the 2024 election, Blanche served as Trump’s personal defense attorney in three of the four major criminal cases the former and now current president faced, including leading the legal team during Trump’s high-profile New York hush-money criminal trial. Trump has openly pledged to exact “retribution” against his political opponents during his second term, and has repeatedly pressured the Justice Department to pursue prosecutions against high-profile critics, including former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. When Louisiana Republican Senator John N. Kennedy, a generally loyal ally of the Trump administration, asked Blanche if he counted Trump as a personal friend, the acting AG pushed back. “I’m his lawyer — was his lawyer. And now I’m the deputy attorney general,” Blanche said. “I met him as his criminal defence attorney, I’m not sure there’s very many people who have ever had a criminal defence attorney who calls that person their friend.”

    Second, Blanche committed that a controversial provision of the now-voided IRS settlement would never go into effect. The struck-down deal included two contentious terms: full immunity from future IRS audits for Trump, and the creation of a $1.7 billion (£1.2 billion) “anti-weaponisation fund” designed to compensate individuals who claim they were unfairly targeted by government agencies. The proposal sparked bipartisan outrage on Capitol Hill, with lawmakers from both major parties demanding answers on whether the fund would move forward even after the judge’s ruling. Republican Senator Mike Lee pressed Blanche to confirm the fund would be scrapped entirely, asking: “You have no reason to believe that the so-called weaponisation fund will continue because of the settlement, agreement, is that correct?” Blanche responded clearly: “I am confident it will not.” Fellow Republican Senator Thom Tillis went further, demanding the administration issue formal written confirmation that the initiative was permanently abandoned.

    Third, Blanche publicly apologized to survivors of Jeffrey Epstein for redaction errors in the release of the late convicted sex offender’s case files, the most politically explosive issue facing the Justice Department since Trump returned to office. After massive public pressure, Congress ordered the Justice Department to release more than six million pages of internal documents from the federal investigation into Epstein’s crimes. But the slow pace of release and overly broad redactions have drawn fierce criticism from lawmakers and survivors alike, with a dozen survivors attending Wednesday’s hearing wearing shirts printed with images of the heavily redacted files to protest the department’s handling of the process. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, the panel’s top Republican, pressed Blanche on multiple failures: “problematic redactions”, “insufficient effort” on following unclosed investigative leads, refusal to meet with survivors, and the controversial recent transfer of Epstein’s accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell to a lower-security prison. Blanche argued that processing millions of documents in a compressed timeline was a “Herculean task”, noting that his team reviewed six million pages to apply what they deemed appropriate redactions. He did, however, acknowledge mistakes: “There were mistakes that were made, and so approximately 1% of the redactions had to be fixed. We had dozens of lawyers on call.” When Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal asked if he would apologize directly to survivors for the department’s missteps, Blanche agreed. “I will absolutely say that any mistake that we made should not have been made,” he said. “And I very much … I very much apologise.”

    Fourth, Blanche broke with Trump on a key constitutional question, confirming that Trump is ineligible to run for a third presidential term in 2028, a position that contradicts open speculation from Trump and some of his allies. The 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution explicitly bars any person from being elected president more than twice. When Democratic Senator Chris Coons of Delaware asked Blanche, a trained lawyer, to rule on the question of constitutional eligibility, Blanche gave a straightforward answer: “I don’t believe he is, no.” Trump has previously said he would “love” to seek a third term, though he has ruled out running for vice president as a constitutional loophole, and has publicly praised top potential 2028 Republican contenders Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio as suitable successors.

    Fifth, the hearing saw flashes of the aggressive courtroom style Blanche honed as Trump’s defense attorney, even as he adopted a generally more measured tone than his predecessor Bondi, who repeatedly clashed with lawmakers during her own congressional appearances. While Blanche mostly responded to sharp questioning with technical, lawyerly answers, he pushed back hard against two Democratic senators over their lines of questioning. When Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse asked about FBI Director Kash Patel’s professional fitness for the role, Blanche retorted: “That’s an extraordinarily obnoxious question, Senator.” Later, he clashed with New Jersey Senator Cory Booker, who interrupted Blanche mid-answer during questioning about the department’s review of the proposed mega-merger between media giants Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery. “You don’t even let me answer, man,” Blanche exclaimed, with the rest of their exchange remaining tense.

    Going into the next phase of the confirmation process, most Republican committee members appear ready to back Blanche’s nomination despite lingering criticism of his handling of the Epstein files. Tillis, who was seen as the most undecided Republican on the committee, signaled he would likely support Blanche after receiving confirmation the anti-weaponization fund would not move forward. The only remaining question mark is Texas Republican Senator John Cornyn, another skeptic who has not yet signaled his position. The Senate Judiciary Committee will hold a vote in the coming days to decide whether to advance Blanche’s nomination to the full Senate, where the entire chamber will cast a final vote on whether to confirm him as the permanent attorney general.

  • Americans react to making daylight saving time permanent

    Americans react to making daylight saving time permanent

    In a landmark vote that has split public opinion across the United States, the House of Representatives has approved the Sunshine Protection Act, legislation that would lock the nation into permanent daylight saving time. If enacted into law, the bill would end the longstanding, widely criticized practice of twice-yearly clock changes that has disrupted sleep patterns, economic activity, and public health for decades. The move comes after years of growing frustration from American voters, who have repeatedly called for an end to the seasonal clock shifting tradition that dates back nearly a century in the U.S. As the bill now moves to the Senate for consideration and awaits a potential signature from the White House, Americans across the country are sharing sharply divided reactions to the proposed policy shift. Proponents of the change, including business groups representing retail, tourism, and outdoor recreation industries, celebrate the decision, arguing that permanent daylight saving time will boost consumer spending, create more opportunities for outdoor leisure activities, and reduce energy consumption. Many ordinary Americans also welcome the end of clock changes, saying the twice-yearly shifts leave them groggy, disrupt their daily routines for weeks, and contribute to sleep deprivation that can harm work performance and personal health. However, opponents, including prominent sleep scientists, agricultural organizations, and many parents, have raised significant concerns about the policy. Critics note that permanent daylight saving time would leave northern parts of the country with darker morning commutes and school drop-offs for half the year, raising safety risks for children and workers. Sleep researchers also warn that permanent daylight saving time would shift human circadian rhythms out of alignment with natural solar cycles, leading to long-term negative impacts on public health, including higher rates of chronic conditions and increased risk of cardiovascular events. The legislative step marks the most significant progress ever made toward ending seasonal clock changes in the U.S., after decades of failed attempts at reform. While the House’s action is a major milestone, the bill still faces an uncertain path in the Senate, where previous versions of the legislation have stalled in recent years. As policymakers weigh the final decision, the debate over permanent daylight saving time continues to unfold in households, workplaces, and public forums across the country.