born in uganda, herfamily was one of thousands expelled by idi amin.'s now a british newspaper columnist. a warm welcome to all of you, good to have you back with us. israel's newspaper front pages this weekend are not the ones benyamin netenyahu was probably expecting. after the second indecisive election in five months, power is described as "slipping away." "himself alone" and "political death spasms" are among the headlines. prime minister for the last ten years, with a three—year stint before that in the 1990s, mr netenyahu, he's been reduced to urging benny gantz, the ex—army chief who leads the newish centrist party blue and white, the largest in the knesset after tuesday's poll, to join a unity government. gantz told him to push off. this in a week when iran, a country the israeli prime minister regularly invokes in elections as a reason why it needs a strong government, was blamed by the united states for halving saudi oil production with two drone attacks, claimed by houthi rebels in neighbouring yemen. before we talk about all of that, jonat