![]() "Going into this game, there's been other results you could probably look at and see these teams aren't here to be rolled over. Credit to them, they were brilliant tonight and gave us a good game. "There's unbelievable teams and teams that we're not used to coming up against. They're a good side and nobody can be underestimated at this tournament. A very athletic team, tidy on the ball, they made runs in behind and they were very creative. "We're chuffed to get the win," she told Sky Sports post-match. READ MORE: Aston Villa 2023/24 WSL fixtures released in full as Carla Ward's side open season at Villa Park READ MORE: Aston Villa's Rachel Daly sent message by Lionesses legend ahead of Women's World Cup The Manchester United goalkeeper made two huge saves to deny Haiti after England's defence was cut apart by the 53rd ranked team in FIFA's standings.ĭaly praised the opponents and said earlier games in the tournament presented a clear warning teams are here to compete. Daly started the game on the bench with Arsenal's new recruit given the nod up front, but the Villa star came on in the second half and looked threatening in front of goal.īut it was Mary Earps' heroics in goal second half that ensured England scraped their way over the line. Sarina Wiegman's side kicked off their World Cup campaign with a much-needed victory, but they were made to work for it as only a first half penalty strike from Georgia Stanway separated the two teams on the night. Alongside them, it is the manifesto signed by more than 12,000 reservists, including 540 volunteer fighter pilots, who are considered crucial to the country's defence, that has aroused the greatest alarm.Aston Villa and England forward Rachel Daly insists nobody can be underestimated at this summer's FIFA Women's World Cup after the Lionesses narrowly edged past Haiti 1-0 in their opening game on Saturday. Far from the level and intensity of such demonstrations diminishing, week after week they have been joined by businessmen, executives of Israel's prestigious technology companies, as well as writers, professors and intellectuals. A description endorsed by the majority of those who have endured the increasing repression by the Israeli police every weekend. Scientist Shikma Bressler, who has taken the lead in the protest demonstrations, describes the passing of the law as "dictatorial legislation". The direct driving force behind the judicial reform, Justice Minister Yariv Levin, expressed restraint: "The law passed is of the utmost importance and I can express no greater and better wish than that the people will understand it".Īt the moment, at least a large part of the people still do not understand, as the rift is evident in Israel as soon as the law was passed, protest demonstrations intensified with numerous street and road blockades. The Israeli opposition will appeal to the Supreme Court the first judicial reform law to be passed For the powerful Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, 'what we have achieved after many years of work and effort is to restore the balances of power, which were violated thirty years ago by the then chief justice Aharon Barak'. This is obviously not the view of Likud and certainly not that of the more radical members of Netanyahu's pro-Netanyahu government. This is not a victory for the coalition," he stressed, "but a defeat for Israeli democracy". This has now been cancelled by the government, according to the first angry statement by the head of the opposition, former Prime Minister Yair Lapid. It was thus one of the fundamental checks and balances in the separation of powers. ![]() whether such acts are in accordance with the law, in a country that has no written constitution. In essence, this first reform strips the Israeli Supreme Court of the power it has had until now to uphold or annul government decisions or appointments on the basis of their "reasonableness", i.e. ![]() The Knesset, Israel's parliament, voted on the Reasonableness Law, which marks the first and decisive stage of the reform of the Israeli judicial system, by 64 votes to 0, that is, with each and every one of the votes of the current government coalition, and none against because the entire opposition decided to boycott the vote by not participating in it, after all attempts at negotiation failed. All was ultimately futile, including President Isaac Herzog's visit to the armoured room in Sheba Hospital where Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was recovering from the implantation of a pacemaker. Not the nearly 30 mass demonstrations held every week this year, not the march of tens of thousands of Israelis on foot between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, not the harsh letter from the fighter pilots threatening to abandon their posts, not even the warnings from both the White House and a large part of the Jewish communities in the United States. ![]()
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