Today Trump unveiled the proposal Jared Kushner cooked up for an Israeli/Palestinian peace plan map, this being the political side of the proposal with the economic side released last year.
The conference was attended by both Netanyahu and the Israeli opposition leader Benny Gantz, but not by any Palestinians who preemptively rejected the proposal before it was announced let alone released, and are rioting in Gaza.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Peace-to-Prosperity-0120.pdf?mod=article_inline
While leaving wiggle room for further border negotiations, this plan notably comes with a detailed map proposal, something other plans usually never produced.
On the Palestinian side, the plan charts a two-state solution with an independent Palestine with its capitol as East Jerusalem recognized by the US as Al Quds, a West Bank and Gaza connected by a tunnel, access to ports at Ashdod and Haifa and potential construction of a Gaza airport/port (at which point Ashdod/Haifa access get dropped), multiple border crossings into Jordan and access to Jerusalem holy sites like the Al Aqsa Mosque. Arab residents of Jerusalem would be given the voluntary option of Israeli or Palestinian citizenship, or Israel permanent status without citizenship. It calls for Palestinian refugees to be absorbed into the state of Palestine, or integrated into consenting host countries (Jordan/Egypt), or resettlement of 5,000 refugees per year per country into other Arab countries participating in a Palestinian resettlement program. This joins the economic benefits of a $50 billion fund set up to build Palestinian infrastructure, transportation and connecting highways and tunnels, water treatment plants, hospitals, manufacturing sector and economy and tourism. This would be mostly Arab-funded, and prioritizing job growth to address the rampant unemployment. Under the plan, during the negotiation period Israel will be expected not to build any new settlements, or expand any enclaves past their current footprint, or demolish any Palestinian structures outside of illegal construction or punitive demolitions after terrorist attacks.
On the Israeli side, the plan cements Israeli territorial annexation and does not call for the removal of major settlements, while leaving minor settlements up to negotiations. The map is drawn recognizing the lands Israel holds in the West Bank and continues to recognize the new city of Jerusalem as Israeli controlled and their capitol. It calls for the disarmament of Hamas and guarantees of Israeli security, and the end of Palestinian jihadi propaganda programs in education, and the end of boycotts like BDS. During the negotiation period, it calls for the new Palestinian government not to join any international organizations without the consent of Israel, not press cases in the ICC / ICJ / Interpol and to terminate the bounty payments to terrorists.
On the internal Palestinian side, the plan does not demand a unity government of Palestine to bridge the divide but instead default recognizes the Palestinian Authority or any new coalition government acceptable to Israel that disarms Hamas and Palestinian Jihad. It does not call for unity elections from what I can tell, though it does recommend the mediation of Jordan in forming a Palestinian government. It does however leave a door open to Hamas having a legitimized role in a Palestinian unity government
if Hamas adopts the Quartet Principles, recognizes Israel's right to exist and commits to disarmament and the peace process. The plan puts up a roadblock here and says that the United States and Israeli
will not commit to this process if Hamas or Islamic Jihad or their surrogates hold significant control of the Palestinian government without adopting the peace process.
Overall, its a generous offer to the Palestinians and one of the most charitable two-state solutions they could hope for under current geopolitics and absolutely an improvement to their situation. Its also something they will completely reject out of hand and not even remotely consider, but at least it will now be dangling over Hamas when months pass and Palestinians cool down and return to protesting about their 70%+ unemployment rate and lack of infrastructure.
And from what I can tell, this plan has dropped even the vaguest hint of a threat implicit in original drafting of the plan as an 'ultimatum', that would signal unilateralism if 'either party' rejected it (which only Palestinians would do, of course). So its lacking that fire and fury element.