Three news stories summarized & contextualized by analytic journalist Colin Wright.

Israel’s wartime government frays as frustration with Netanyahu grows

Summary: A politically centrist member of Israel’s war cabinet, Benny Gantz, announced over the weekend that he would leave the government if Prime Minister Netanyahu doesn’t present a plan for the future of the war in Gaza by June 8.

Context: This ultimatum is being seen as an indication that the temporary alliance of necessity between political parties in Israel following Hamas’ attack on the country on October 7 is beginning to fray, and that Netanyahu’s seeming lack of a plan for what happens after Israeli forces root out the last of Hamas’ leadership in the Gaza Strip is a broad cause for consternation; the country’s defense minister recently demanded that Netanyahu make a pledge to not establish a military government in Gaza, which he worries is where things are headed, and which is a situation he says would be untenable for many reasons; Netanyahu, in response, has accused Gantz of supporting Israel’s defeat in the conflict against Hamas.

—The New York Times

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UN urges US to stop forced returns to Haiti after latest deportation flight

Summary: The UN refugee agency has asked the US government to stop forcibly returning Haitian refugees to Haiti, as doing so puts those refugees at life-threatening risk due to widespread gang violence.

Context: This call for a change in policy came after the US’s most recent deportation flight last week, and the concern is that Haiti is basically under the control of a slew of gangs, which unified against the government in recent months; the UN estimates that 362,000 people, about half of them children, are internally displaced in Haiti right now, and the UN’s refugee agency is asking the US to redesignate Haiti for a temporary protective status which grants Haitian refugees temporary permission to stay and work in the US—this status is currently set to expire in early August.

—Al Jazeera

France mobilises police to regain control of New Caledonia airport road

Summary: In the wake of several days of at times violent and destructive riots, French police have cleared barricades from the main road leading to the airport in the New Caledonian capital city, Noumea, though officials say it will still be a few days before all the debris has been cleared.

Context: The French territory’s main airport is still closed because of unrest, and these protests, which sparked the rioting, were catalyzed by a constitutional amendment that would allegedly dilute the vote of indigenous people by allowing French people who had lived in New Caledonia for ten years to vote in provincial elections—something pro-independence (from France) indigenous groups say is an attempt to prevent their movement from ever resulting in a decoupling from European governance.

—Reuters

According to a new survey, Americans are reporting being more stressed on average, and the number for women is substantially higher than for men across four major age-groups, though young women in particular are reporting the highest levels of stress across all age and gender demographics.

—Gallup

40,000

Milestone (in points) that the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached late last week for the first time.

The surge in money flooding into Dow-listed companies is being attributed to new data that showed annual inflation in the US has eased a bit, following three months of less-than-ideal inflation news—suggesting the Fed could still lower their interest rate sometime this year.

—NPR News

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