Sky News host Andrew Bolt has told a former Israeli government official to ‘dream on’ after he suggested Prime Minister Anthony Albanese should roll back his recognition of Palestine.
Albanese announced on Monday that would recognise Palestinian statehood at the United Nations next month, following other Western allies.
After the PM’s declaration was welcomed by Hamas, Eylon Levy, the former spokesman for Israel, joined Bolt on his show to slam Albanese.
‘ is rewarding Hamas for the October 7 massacre and encouraging more terrorism, more barbaric atrocities against Israeli civilians,’ he said.
‘I hope the n Government is holding some serious crisis talks to discuss how on earth they ended up on the same side as a globally-proscribed, terrorist, Jihadi organisation.’
Mr Levy then suggested Hamas’s praise gave Albanese the opportunity to reconsider his decision.
‘Hamas is giving , the n government, a ladder to climb down from this tree,’ he said.
‘There’s no shame in saying: “We made a mistake. We were wrong. We don’t want to be on the same side of Hamas. We’re on the same side as our democratic ally, Israel”.’
Bolt then issued the two-word rebuttal: ‘Dream on.’
Bolt then raised Albanese’s claim from Monday that he had ensured commitments from the Palestinian Authority’s Mahmoud Abbas.
Among them, Abbas had said Hamas will play no future role in the Palestinian state, free elections will be held, and that he will demilitarise.
Abbas, who has not faced election since 2005 in the notoriously corrupt West Bank, has also promised to end ‘pay to slay’ rewards for terrorists and their families.
‘It’s like taking the word of a teenager to clean his bedroom when it hasn’t been cleaned in 20 years and he doesn’t even have a broom,’ Mr Levy said.
‘Mahmoud Abbas says he’s going to stop Hamas taking over a Palestinian state. Hamas is by far the most popular Palestinian party.
‘The only thing now that is stopping Hamas from taking over the West Bank is the Israeli security presence there.’
Mr Levy served as an Israeli government spokesman and was a globally recognised voice of the country following Hamas’ October 7 attack in 2023 during which terrorists stormed the Nova music festival in Israel, killing 1,200 people.
He previously served as the international media advisor for President Isaac Herzog after a career as a TV news anchor.
Prior to the end of his time in government, Mr Levy was suspended until further notice after the British Foreign Office complained about him, The Times of Israel reports.
The furore is understood to have been about one of his tweets, which responded to comments by Foreign Secretary Lord David Cameron about aid access in Gaza.
He told the publication last year it was ‘difficult to believe’ his suspension was ‘really about the tweet to David Cameron because I tweeted government policy and facts’.
Mr Levy had written a now-deleted post on X responding to another one from Lord Cameron that urged Israel ‘to allow more [aid] trucks into Gaza’, the BBC reported.
‘I hope you are also aware there are NO limits on the entry of food, water, medicine, or shelter equipment into Gaza, and in fact the crossings have EXCESS capacity,’ Mr Levy said.
‘Test us. Send another 100 trucks a day to Kerem Shalom and we’ll get them in.’
More than two million Palestinians face severe food insecurity, based on United Nations projections.
Israel has denied responsibility for the lack of food in the Gaza Strip, accusing Hamas of stealing aid shipments.
It has also denied there is starvation among the population, although it has restricted the flow of food to Gaza for months, according to international human rights groups.