Palestine Coalition issue formal complaint against the Metropolitan Police Commissioner over his accusations of antisemitism
This work by Middle East Monitor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

The Palestine Coalition has today commenced a formal complaint with the London Mayor’s Office over comments by Metropolitan Police Commissioner Mark Rowley. In interviews with The Times and ITV on 1st May, Commissioner Rowley asserted that the Coalition organisers have sought to route marches for Palestinian rights past synagogues. In The Times he said, “The fact that features as the organisers’ intent, I think that sends a message … that feels like antisemitism.” On ITV he said, “They set out with an intent to march near synagogues etc and every single time that we put conditions on to prevent that.”
The Palestine Coalition have condemned his remarks and wrote to the Commissioner two days ago calling on him to retract these false and inflammatory statements. They said “The truth is that at no point have we ever requested to ‘walk by’ a synagogue on any of our marches. We have no interest in doing so. Police recordings of our meetings with you will confirm this…It is completely unacceptable for a senior public official to make these false claims and accusations, which can only raise the level of tension in the current situation.”
In the complaint to the Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) the Coalition organisers say the Commissioner’s comments were intentional, not inadvertent, and made to undermine and stigmatise the Palestine marches. They say he has contravened the standards of professional behaviour of his office by not acting with honesty or integrity and has abused his powers and acted in a manner which undermines public confidence in the police. He has also acted in a racially discriminatory way in inferring that protests against fundamental violations of international law by Israel and by Britain are antisemitic. The Coalition is demanding a retraction by the Commissioner and a full apology.
The complaint comes ahead of the annual Nakba Day March, held this year on Saturday 16th May, which commemorates the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestine. The demonstration will call for an end to British support for Israel’s crimes against the Palestinian people, and will also protest against the far-right march led by Tommy Robinson, happening on the same day. The Met Police have given the political centre of London to the demonstration by the “Unite the Kingdom” group, whilst continuing to restrict the options for the Nakba Day demonstration and imposing stifling conditions under the Public Order Act.
The Coalition members are: Palestine Solidarity Campaign, Palestinian Forum of Britain, Stop the War Coalition, Friends of Al-Aqsa, Muslim Association of Britain, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
READ: Britain’s ambassador to Washington concedes the ‘special relationship’ belongs to Israel, not the UK

This work by Middle East Monitor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
- Israeli strikes in Lebanon kill 16, wound 21, damage school despite ceasefire
- Football is not ‘the beautiful game’ when it collaborates with genocide
- A Daring Enterprise: A US-Egyptian Partnership and the Case for Soft Power
- Trump sees potential Iran deal within ‘a week’: Fox News
- Subjects of empire: Breaking the cycle of Arab dependency on US elections
- Palestine Coalition issue formal complaint against the Metropolitan Police Commissioner over his accusations of antisemitism
- Slovenia joins Spain in urging EU to protect independence of ICC, UN on Gaza
- Israel orders demolition of nearly 50 Palestinian facilities near East Jerusalem for settlement project
- Ben-Gvir, wife ‘need a psychiatrist immediately,’ Arab Knesset member says
- War on Iran can end if Tehran agrees to terms: Trump
- Israel to spend $730m on propaganda as global image collapses over Gaza genocide
- Latin American anger grows over Israel’s detention of Thiago Ávila
- Palestinian journalists continue reporting from Gaza despite killings, threats and starvation
- Iran says ships complying with new Hormuz transit regulations
- IDF raids Gaza-bound flotilla in international waters — Where is the line between enforcement and unlawful seizure?
- UN calls for immediate, unconditional release of detained Global Sumud aid flotilla members
- The surcharge tax Americans pay to finance Israel-first wars
- Trump’s new Iran negotiator is Israel lobbyist who denounced talks with Tehran
- Israeli army arrests 17 Palestinians, demolishes home in West Bank raids
- Iran’s pipe dream: Why US bases are not going anywhere
- Pakistan ‘hopeful’ for ‘lasting’ US-Iran pact for ‘durable peace, stability’ after Trump pauses Hormuz mission
- UAE president receives solidarity calls after attacks from Iran
- Iran, Saudi Arabia stress diplomacy to prevent further regional tensions
- Israel’s Netanyahu appears in court for 84th hearing in corruption trial
- Beijing extends support to Iran amid conflict with US ahead of Trump’s China trip
- The hypothesis of the collapse of powers like Iran fails in the real world
- Israel seeks to resume attacks on Iran, message to Washington reveals
- Israel pursuing systematic annexation in West Bank, campaign says
- US condemns Khartoum airport attack, renews call for Sudan truce
- Over 400 former diplomats urge Brussels to act against major Israeli settlement plan in West Bank
- Democrats urge Trump administration to break silence on Israel’s nuclear programme
- Female prisoners in Damon prison subjected to over 10 repression and torture incidents in April
- Air defense activated against drones near Iran’s Qeshm Island: Report
- Spain urges EU to take steps to protect independence of ICC, UN, their actions to end Gaza genocide
- Moves by Abbas’s son revive debate over Palestinian leadership succession
- Fatah says 63% of Gaza now under Israeli control
- Archbishop Hanna warns of escalating Israeli attacks targeting Christians in Jerusalem
- Saudi Arabia condemns Khartoum airport attack, urges neighbours to respect Sudan’s sovereignty
- Israeli forces bulldoze agricultural land southeast of Bethlehem
- Sudan accuses UAE and Ethiopia of involvement in drone attack on Khartoum airport
- Iran denies attacking UAE, warns of ‘decisive response’ if strikes launched from its territory
- Israeli army chief, air force commanders acknowledge October 2023 failure
- Brazilian President Lula calls for release of Global Sumud Flotilla activists detained by Israel
- US offers $10M reward for information on leader of Iran-aligned militia group
- Iran, the crisis of US power and the end of the imperial narrative
- US proposes UN resolution on Strait of Hormuz freedom of navigation
- The UAE: Anti-Islamic alignment and the politics of illusion
- Iran introduces new mechanism for ship transits in Strait of Hormuz
- Gaza sees one of highest numbers of security incidents since ceasefire: UN
- White House sent Iran private warning before Hormuz escort operation: Report


Israel to spend $730m on propaganda as global image collapses over Gaza genocide
This work by Middle East Monitor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Israel is preparing to spend nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars on its propaganda apparatus, in a sign of growing alarm in Tel Aviv over its collapse in global standing following the genocide in Gaza and expanding wars across the region.
According to The Jerusalem Post, Israel’s public diplomacy budget, known in Hebrew as hasbara, has risen to $730 million, more than four times the $150 million allocated the previous year. That earlier sum was itself reportedly around 20 times higher than Israel’s pre-2023 spending on such efforts.
The vast increase was included in Israel’s national budget passed in March and will be directed through the national public diplomacy directorate, which oversees efforts to shape foreign public opinion.
The surge in propaganda spending comes as Israel is increasingly seen by critics and human rights organisations as a pariah state.
The budget increase appears to reflect Israeli fears that the country’s ability to rely on Western political cover may be weakening. This is particularly true in the US, Israel’s most important ally and arms supplier, where public support has fallen sharply.
A Pew Research Center poll published in April found that 60 per cent of US adults now hold an unfavourable view of Israel, up from 53 per cent last year and nearly 20 points higher than in 2022. Only 37 per cent view Israel favourably.
The shift cuts across important sections of US society. Pew found that 80 per cent of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents now view Israel unfavourably, while 57 per cent of Republicans under 50 also hold a negative view.
READ: Fatah says 63% of Gaza now under Israeli control
Gallup has recorded a similar trend. Its February survey found that American sympathy is no longer clearly with Israel, with 41 per cent saying they sympathise more with Palestinians and 36 per cent with Israelis. Gallup said Israel’s favourable rating had fallen close to its historical low, while ratings of the Palestinian Territories had reached a new high.
The crisis has triggered open concern inside Israel’s own policy establishment. The Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv has warned of a “deepening crisis” in Israel’s standing in the US, pointing to declining support among younger Americans, Democrats, younger Republicans and parts of the Jewish community.
A separate report cited growing diplomatic and public opinion isolation and warned of a “creeping economic boycott”, as businesses, academic institutions and civil society organisations become more reluctant to maintain ties with Israel.
Israel’s foreign ministry has responded by expanding its messaging machinery. Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar has overseen the creation of a dedicated unit to shape international narratives, while funds have reportedly been channelled into digital campaigns, foreign delegations, influencer outreach and pro-Israel advocacy networks.
Israel hired a firm linked to former Trump campaign strategist Brad Parscale to run a pro-Israel social media campaign, with Israel having paid the firm $9 million and renewed the contract.
Reports have also pointed to a centralised “media war room” tracking coverage of Israel across hundreds of outlets and monitoring thousands of daily references. Additional spending has reportedly been directed towards evangelical networks, private public relations firms and campaigns aimed at universities, influencers and young audiences.
The scale of the spending suggests that Israel views its deteriorating image not merely as a public relations problem, but as a strategic threat. Israel’s military dominance has long depended on the political, diplomatic and military support of Western governments, especially Washington. If Western publics increasingly view Israel as a genocidal, apartheid and expansionist state, sustaining unconditional support becomes harder for elected leaders.
READ: Israel launches propaganda blitz targeting US churches, influencers and AI
This work by Middle East Monitor is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
- Israeli strikes in Lebanon kill 16, wound 21, damage school despite ceasefire
- Football is not ‘the beautiful game’ when it collaborates with genocide
- A Daring Enterprise: A US-Egyptian Partnership and the Case for Soft Power
- Trump sees potential Iran deal within ‘a week’: Fox News
- Subjects of empire: Breaking the cycle of Arab dependency on US elections
- Palestine Coalition issue formal complaint against the Metropolitan Police Commissioner over his accusations of antisemitism
- Slovenia joins Spain in urging EU to protect independence of ICC, UN on Gaza
- Israel orders demolition of nearly 50 Palestinian facilities near East Jerusalem for settlement project
- Ben-Gvir, wife ‘need a psychiatrist immediately,’ Arab Knesset member says
- War on Iran can end if Tehran agrees to terms: Trump
- Israel to spend $730m on propaganda as global image collapses over Gaza genocide
- Latin American anger grows over Israel’s detention of Thiago Ávila
- Palestinian journalists continue reporting from Gaza despite killings, threats and starvation
- Iran says ships complying with new Hormuz transit regulations
- IDF raids Gaza-bound flotilla in international waters — Where is the line between enforcement and unlawful seizure?
- UN calls for immediate, unconditional release of detained Global Sumud aid flotilla members
- The surcharge tax Americans pay to finance Israel-first wars
- Trump’s new Iran negotiator is Israel lobbyist who denounced talks with Tehran
- Israeli army arrests 17 Palestinians, demolishes home in West Bank raids
- Iran’s pipe dream: Why US bases are not going anywhere
- Pakistan ‘hopeful’ for ‘lasting’ US-Iran pact for ‘durable peace, stability’ after Trump pauses Hormuz mission
- UAE president receives solidarity calls after attacks from Iran
- Iran, Saudi Arabia stress diplomacy to prevent further regional tensions
- Israel’s Netanyahu appears in court for 84th hearing in corruption trial
- Beijing extends support to Iran amid conflict with US ahead of Trump’s China trip
- The hypothesis of the collapse of powers like Iran fails in the real world
- Israel seeks to resume attacks on Iran, message to Washington reveals
- Israel pursuing systematic annexation in West Bank, campaign says
- US condemns Khartoum airport attack, renews call for Sudan truce
- Over 400 former diplomats urge Brussels to act against major Israeli settlement plan in West Bank
- Democrats urge Trump administration to break silence on Israel’s nuclear programme
- Female prisoners in Damon prison subjected to over 10 repression and torture incidents in April
- Air defense activated against drones near Iran’s Qeshm Island: Report
- Spain urges EU to take steps to protect independence of ICC, UN, their actions to end Gaza genocide
- Moves by Abbas’s son revive debate over Palestinian leadership succession
- Fatah says 63% of Gaza now under Israeli control
- Archbishop Hanna warns of escalating Israeli attacks targeting Christians in Jerusalem
- Saudi Arabia condemns Khartoum airport attack, urges neighbours to respect Sudan’s sovereignty
- Israeli forces bulldoze agricultural land southeast of Bethlehem
- Sudan accuses UAE and Ethiopia of involvement in drone attack on Khartoum airport
- Iran denies attacking UAE, warns of ‘decisive response’ if strikes launched from its territory
- Israeli army chief, air force commanders acknowledge October 2023 failure
- Brazilian President Lula calls for release of Global Sumud Flotilla activists detained by Israel
- US offers $10M reward for information on leader of Iran-aligned militia group
- Iran, the crisis of US power and the end of the imperial narrative
- US proposes UN resolution on Strait of Hormuz freedom of navigation
- The UAE: Anti-Islamic alignment and the politics of illusion
- Iran introduces new mechanism for ship transits in Strait of Hormuz
- Gaza sees one of highest numbers of security incidents since ceasefire: UN
- White House sent Iran private warning before Hormuz escort operation: Report



‘Desperately Bouncing From One Extreme to Another’: Trump Pauses ‘Project Freedom’ in Strait of Hormuz
Article by Jake Johnson republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

An Iranian official said Trump’s operation “failed completely” and that Iran “will not participate in direct negotiations until the United States formally announces the end of the blockade.”
US President Donald Trump announced late Tuesday that he is putting his administration’s scheme to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz on hold after just one full day, a decision that came hours after top American officials touted the president’s so-called “Project Freedom” at press briefings.
Trump said in a social media post that he paused the project—which allowed just two commercial ships to pass through the strait—“based on the request of Pakistan and other countries.” The US president, whose war of choice is historically unpopular with the American public, also asserted that “Great Progress has been made toward a Complete and Final Agreement with Representatives of Iran,” a claim that Iran rejected.
RECOMMENDED…

Trump’s Strait of Hormuz Ploy Aims to Manufacture ‘Pretext for Escalation,’ Iran Warns

‘Designed-to-Backfire’: Trump Slammed for Closure of Hormuz Strait as Iran Talks Falter
As Pakistan’s prime minister welcomed Trump’s announcement, an unnamed Iranian official told Drop Site’s Jeremy Scahill that the US president’s short-lived operation “failed completely” and that his statement announcing the pause of Project Freedom was “riddled with falsehoods.” The official added that “we will not participate in direct negotiations until the United States formally announces the end of the blockade.”
The US president said in his post that the illegal US naval blockade of Iran would “remain in full force and effect.”
“Trump is desperately bouncing from one extreme to another,” said political scientist Robert Pape in response to Trump’s announcement.
Trump’s decision to put Project Freedom on hold came shortly after Pentagon Secretary Pete Hegseth, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Dan Caine, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio hailed the president’s initiative as a bold mission to rescue some 1,600 vessels stranded in the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran closed in response to the unlawful US-Israeli war and subsequent naval blockade.
“Iran’s plan, a form of international extortion, is unacceptable. That ends with Project Freedom,” Hegseth declared during a press briefing on Tuesday morning.
Rubio similarly decried Iran’s actions in the Strait of Hormuz—located in Omani and Iranian territorial waters—as violations of international law.
“There is no international law that allows you to say: I’m going to put mines in an international body of water, and I’m going to blow up ships that don’t listen to us and try to go through,” said Rubio.
Legal scholar Maryam Jamshidi rejected the top US diplomat’s assessment, calling it “all wrong.”
“Hormuz is not international waters,” Jamshidi wrote. “It’s an international strait composed of the territorial waters of Iran and Oman. Iran can mine its territorial waters during wartime. The laws of naval warfare also allow Iran to target ships in certain cases. The US is the only criminal here.”
Article by Jake Johnson republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).


‘Outrageous’: GOP Budget Includes $1 Billion in Taxpayer Funds for Trump Ballroom
Article by Brad Reed republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

“Using taxpayer dollars to toady to a wannabe-dictator is both pandering and pathetic,” said one critic.
Even though President Donald Trump has long insisted that his proposed White House luxury ballroom would be funded by private donations, congressional Republicans unveiled legislation on Monday that would put US taxpayers on the hook for the project.
As reported by Punchbowl News, Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) released a proposal for a budget reconciliation package that includes $30 billion more in funds for US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), $3.4 billion for Customs and Border Protection, and $2.5 billion for the Department of Homeland Security.
RECOMMENDED…

GOP Senators Unveil Plan to Pay for $400 Million White House Ballroom With Taxpayer Funds

Under Trump, Record Number of Americans Say Personal Finances Getting Worse
Tucked into the proposal is $1 billion for what is described as an “East Wing modernization project, including above-ground and below-ground security features.”
Given that Trump is planning to build his ballroom on the area of the White House’s East Wing that he demolished last year, this means that $1 billion in taxpayer money would be going to the president’s vanity project.
Democratic officials immediately pounced on news that their Republican counterparts are planning to funnel $1 billion to the ballroom project, noting that the budget plan comes as Americans are struggling with the surging costs of energy and food.
“Zero dollars to lower costs,” wrote Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), ranking member of the House Budget Committee. “Zero dollars to protect your healthcare. A massive check for an out-of-control ICE, and $1 billion for Trump’s ballroom. This Republican budget bill is a disaster.”
Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.) responded to the GOP ballroom plan by declaring, “Oh hell no.”
“Spiking prices, SCOTUS attacking democracy, collapsing faith in the US government,” Casten added, “and the GOP is prioritizing sending more money to murderous ICE agents and Trump’s ballroom vanity project. This is offensive.”
Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.) contrasted the GOP finding money to fund the ballroom with its unwillingness to extend enhanced subsidies for Americans who buy health insurance through exchanges established by the Affordable Care Act.
“Add the ballroom to the laundry list of things Trump said someone else would pay for,” Ansari wrote. “Ultimately, of course, it’s always the American people footing the bill for his outrageous pet projects. A $1BN price tag while he rips away your healthcare. Sickening.”
Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) welcomed the chance to have his Republican colleagues go on the record in favor of funding the ballroom.
“Just flagging that now everyone gets an up or down vote on the ballroom!” he wrote.
Elected Democrats weren’t the only ones to hammer the GOP for the proposal to fund Trump’s ballroom.
Lisa Gilbert, co-president of Public Citizen, called the GOP plan a “corrupt absurdity” that would make taxpayers shell out $1 billion for the president’s “grandiose, bombastic, vanity project.”
“Using taxpayer dollars to toady to a wannabe-dictator is both pandering and pathetic,” added Gilbert, who decried the plans for increased ICE funding as “abhorrent.”
Kristen Crowell, executive director of Families Over Billionaires, denounced the ballroom funding plan as “a glaring symbol of misplaced priorities and grift,” while also calling attention to other harmful aspects of the GOP’s budget proposal.
“At a time when families are struggling to afford housing, child care, and other basic necessities,” Crowell said, “the White House and Republicans in Congress are proposing to pour tens of billions of dollars into an already bloated and unaccountable deportation machine—while also carving out funding for the president’s own luxury projects.”
Article by Brad Reed republished from Common Dreams under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).

- Report Details Massive Federal Contracts, Enforcement Actions Against Trump’s Ballroom Donors ›
- If You Think Trump’s $350 Million Ballroom Won’t Cost Taxpayers, You Don’t Understand the Cost of Corruption ›
- GOP Senators Unveil Plan to Pay for $400 Million White House Ballroom With Taxpayer Funds ›
- Republicans want to spend $1 billion in taxpayer money on Trump’s $400 million ballroom ›