Is this the end for Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s great survivor?
- Anger over the PM’s handling of the war in Gaza has sparked mass protests aiming to force him out of office
- Netanyahu now faces the ire of the international community after an Israeli strike killed 7 aid workers for a US-based group

Benjamin Netanyahu, the Houdini of Israeli politics and its longest-serving prime minister, has been written off many times before.
But with thousands of protesters on the streets every night this week demanding he resign, and growing anger at his handling of the war in Gaza, many wonder how long the veteran political escapologist can survive.
The usually bullish Netanyahu, 74, appears both physically and politically fragile.
Deeply unpopular – no more than four per cent of Israelis trust him, according to one poll late last year – the war in Gaza is taking its toll on the man Israelis call Bibi.

Visibly frail and sallow, he was short-tempered and distracted during a television speech Saturday that his former minister and Likud colleague Limor Livnat called “catastrophic”.