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Former PM Benjamin Netanyahu and far right allies win Israeli election

Markhor

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Thank god. Don't have any expectations of Benny Gantz reviving the peace talks but Bibi is one of many dangerous right-wing authoritarians in the world who needed to be stopped.

He should not be part of any government and made to answer for these corruption charges.

https://apnews.com/d69aa008f6324830...Twitter&utm_medium=AP&utm_campaign=SocialFlow

JERUSALEM (AP) — The Latest on the Israeli election (all times local):

10:15 p.m.

In an apparent setback for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, exit polls show the Israeli leader has fallen short of securing a parliamentary majority with his hard-line allies.

The results posted by Israel’s three major TV stations indicate Netanyahu’s political future could now be in doubt.

The three stations all showed challenger Benny Gantz’s Blue and White party slightly ahead of Netanyahu’s Likud party. However, neither party controls a majority in the 120-seat parliament without the support of Avigdor Lieberman, who heads the midsize Yisrael Beitenu party.

Netanyahu had hoped to secure a majority with his allies in hopes of winning immunity from an expected indictment on corruption charges.

The results raise the likelihood of a unity government between the three parties.
 
Hope these exit polls are accurate.

You're next Trump and Boris.
 
Hope these exit polls are accurate.

You're next Trump and Boris.

I wish i could say the same about Modi lol, but western democracies are way more mature, although lets see who Canada votes in.
 
Looks like they're gonna launch a Gaza Op if an unity government is formed

If a unity government is formed, Netanyahu will remain PM
 
From what I have seen Israel is not a country where a leader looking to be sympathetic to Palestine will be elected. If Israelis are truly against oppression then Netenyanhu would not come so far.
 
No clear winner has emerged from Israel's election, leaving a question mark over who will be prime minister, partial official results confirm.

With just over 60% of votes counted, the party of incumbent Benjamin Netanyahu is neck and neck with that of his centre-left main challenger.

The results indicate that each will struggle to form a majority coalition with smaller parties.

Mr Netanyahu is vying to stay in power for a record fifth term.

The latest results from Tuesday's vote suggest his Likud party won 31 seats, while his opponent Benny Gantz's Blue and White party garnered 32 seats, the Kan public broadcaster says.

A prime minister needs to command a 61-seat majority in the Knesset (parliament).

Mr Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving prime minister, has been in office for 10 years.

The 69 year old has pledged to annex Jewish settlements and a swathe of other territory in the occupied West Bank if he is returned to power.

Palestinians, who seek a state in the West Bank and Gaza, with its capital in occupied East Jerusalem, have warned such a move will kill any hopes for peace.

Mr Gantz has not advocated any form of annexation, though his position on the creation of a Palestinian state is unclear. Like Mr Netanyahu, he has ruled out ever dividing Jerusalem.

Official results have been slow to be released, with only 60% of votes counted by 12:53 (09:53 GMT).

They put Blue and White slightly ahead of Likud, with an alliance of Arab parties third, the ultra-Orthodox Shas party fourth and Yisrael Beiteinu, a nationalist party, in fifth place. The tally does not say how this translates into seats in the Knesset.

Based on these reported results, neither leader can form a majority coalition without support from Yisrael Beiteinu.

That party's leader, Avigdor Lieberman, reiterated that he would only support a government comprising both Likud and Blue and White. However, Blue and White has ruled out sitting with Mr Netanyahu in a coalition.

Exit polls earlier presented a similar picture.

The prime minister is well short of being able to form a governing bloc of right-wing and religious parties that are prepared to sit with him. In fact the result leaves him in an even weaker position than he was after April's vote.

It's almost impossible to predict the outcome, with frenetic horse trading on the way and even the chance of parties fragmenting or politicians shifting allegiances. But as it stands, three broad themes seem among the possibilities:

In the meantime, Mr Netanyahu stays on, but watch this space. For a few weeks.

There was a muted response at Likud's election night headquarters in Tel Aviv.

Hundreds of chairs for party supporters remained empty as activists were kept outside the hall and leaders digested the numbers.

"There is no point starting to work out a coalition based on these numbers as they will change," Likud foreign affairs director Eli Hazan said.

But Blue and White was "cautiously optimistic" that Israel would get new leadership, spokeswoman Melody Sucharewicz told the Times of Israel.

Mr Lieberman prevented Mr Netanyahu from forming a coalition after the previous vote because he refused to back down over a longstanding dispute with religious parties over exempting ultra-Orthodox young men from military service.

However Mr Gantz could have an even more complex job to form a government, because of differences between left-wing parties.

Related Topics

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-49740981
 
Another stalemate, Bibi left a little weaker, all depends on if Lieberman wants to do business, Ideally he will join with Gantz and the Arab coailation.
 
Gantz is being tried for war crimes during the Gaza Operation in a Dutch Court, he is hardly someone you can describe as a progressive. As usual Zionism is the winner and both main parties are essentially right wing expansionist ones.

Good article discussing this...
Now, although the Joint List is the third largest party, this has virtually no meaning in terms of its prospects concerning governance. Palestinian parties have never governed historically in Israel’s “Jewish democracy”, and the Zionist winners don’t really want them in any coalition for real. We need to cut to the chase. The kingmaker here is Avigdor Lieberman of Yisrael Beitenu, period.

Netanyahu or Likud in general will definitely not sit with the Joint List. Lieberman overnight clearly called the possibility of sitting with the Joint List “absurd”. Benny Gantz of Blue White has been more careful in rhetoric, but before the election he rejected sitting with the Joint List when its head Ayman Odeh mooted the possibility. Blue White is not a center party, really. It is a Likud-light party, with many former Likudniks at its helm, and it is pretending to be an opposition to the right, which it isn’t, really. It was a huge issue of contention for Blue White to even accept Ayman Odeh as a speaker in its recent orientalist rally for ‘Democracy’. Leading members Yoaz Hendel and Zvi Hauser boycotted the rally because of it, and 3rd in command Moshe Ya’alon bemoaned that people were turning their cars around because they heard Odeh was booked to speak. If Labor is wary of being perceived as “Arab lovers”, you can bet Blue White is.

The Zionist left is reduced to two tiny parties, which managed to sigh in relief that they passed the electoral threshold of 4 seats. They don’t have a real say here at all.

So let’s get back to Lieberman, the kingmaker. Lieberman has ironically emerged as this kind of ‘moderate’ in between Likud and Blue White, because although he was to the right of Likud, his insistence on secularism has somehow painted him as more liberal than Netanyahu, who was much more willing to compromise with the ultra-orthodox. Imagine that: the same Lieberman who suggested that disloyal Palestinian citizens be decapitated with an axe, and that Palestinian prisoners be drowned by the thousands in the Dead Sea, is now this liberal moderate, because he serves as a counterweight to Netanyahu…

Lieberman calls the possibility of sitting with the Joint List absurd, but he is the epitome of the Israeli absurdity. A fascist racist is now the representation of Israeli “democracy”

https://mondoweiss.net/2019/09/blue-white-right/
 
Poor choice, but I would rather Gantz chaired a coalition government than Netanyahu.

Gantz may be a deeply flawed candidate with significant room for improvement, but at least there is a small hope that he will indeed improve.

Bibi meanwhile is long gone, he is insane.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">It’s official, the Joint List, comprised of four Palestinian parties, all very diverse, will recommend Benny Gantz to build the coalition. I don’t think people realize what andoxxoutlmand groundbreaking thing that is for them to do</p>— Mairav Zonszein מרב זונשיין (@MairavZ) <a href="https://twitter.com/MairavZ/status/1175414473475018753?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 21, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This could finally end the constant occupation threats by Bibi.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">It’s official, the Joint List, comprised of four Palestinian parties, all very diverse, will recommend Benny Gantz to build the coalition. I don’t think people realize what andoxxoutlmand groundbreaking thing that is for them to do</p>— Mairav Zonszein מרב זונשיין (@MairavZ) <a href="https://twitter.com/MairavZ/status/1175414473475018753?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 21, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

This could finally end the constant occupation threats by Bibi.

Gant'z views on the Jordan Valley, West Bank settlements etc are pretty extreme too - he's just Bibi-lite.
 
Makes no difference, they are all scmbags and terrorists in charge of parties in Israel.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The head of Israel's majority-Arab party tweets the Hebrew Bible as he recommends Benny Gantz as prime minister to oust Netanyahu:<br><br>"The stone that was spurned by the builders became the cornerstone." (Psalms 118)<br><br>Amazing. <a href="https://t.co/wz95jbomno">https://t.co/wz95jbomno</a></p>— (((Yair Rosenberg))) (@Yair_Rosenberg) <a href="https://twitter.com/Yair_Rosenberg/status/1175826310658056192?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 22, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

Its official.
 
Gant'z views on the Jordan Valley, West Bank settlements etc are pretty extreme too - he's just Bibi-lite.

He isnt threatening to take over the jordan valley. Any deescalation is good at this point. The status quo should not be distributed.
 
Israeli-Arab lawmakers have recommended that the former army chief Benny Gantz should become prime minister.

Last week's election put the incumbent leader Benjamin Netanyahu neck and neck with Mr Gantz, and the two are now vying to build a governing coalition.

Joint List, the bloc of Arab parties that came in third, says it wants to oust Mr Netanyahu from power.

This is the first time since 1992 that an Arab political group has issued an endorsement for prime minister.

This was Israel's second general election of the year. After the first, in April, coalition talks fell apart and a snap poll was called.

Faced with yet another deadlock, Israel's president Reuven Rivlin has recommended the new government includes both Mr Gantz's Blue and White Alliance, which won 33 seats, and Mr Netanyahu's Likud party, which won 31.

Mr Rivlin has said he will do everything he can to avoid a third general election in Israel this year.

Aymen Odeh, leader of Joint List, told President Rivlin the alliance's priority was to prevent Mr Netanyahu from serving another term.

Joint List won 13 seats in the election. If Mr Gantz had the endorsement of all 13 seats, he would still fall short of the 61 seats needed for a majority in the 120-seat legislature.

This is a significant exercise of political power by Israel's Arab citizens.

President Rivlin is consulting party leaders about whom he should ask to lead the country after last week's inconclusive election results. The Arab parties put in a strong showing, becoming the third largest force in the legislature.

Their support will not give Benny Gantz and his Blue & White alliance a majority, but it will give him a boost in negotiations about who gets the first chance to form a government.

The leader of the Arab grouping, Ayman Odeh, said it wasn't endorsing Mr Gantz and his polices: but was moving to try and block Benjamin Netanyahu from securing another term, and to send a clear message that Israel's future must include the full and equal participation of its Palestinian citizens.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-49790505
 
Israel's long-standing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said he cannot form a government, handing the opportunity to his political rival.

Mr Netanyahu has been in power for the past decade but was unable to secure a majority after September's elections failed to produce a clear winner.

His rival Benny Gantz of the Blue and White party will now be invited to attempt to form a government.

Mr Netanyahu's attempts to bring Mr Gantz's party into government failed.

Announcing the decision to abandon his efforts, Mr Netanyahu said he had tried repeatedly to form a coalition government but had been rebuffed.

Israel's president, Reuven Rivlin, said he would give Mr Gantz 28 days to carry out the same negotiations.

Israeli Arab lawmakers pledged their backing, but Mr Gantz - who leads a right-of-centre alliance- remained more than a dozen seats short of the necessary 61 seat majority.

President Rivlin said he would try to avoid calling another election in a country which had already voted in two this year. If Mr Gantz also fails, the parliament could put forward a third candidate in a final bid to avoid another poll.

September's poll saw Mr Netanyahu's Likud party win 32 seats and Mr Gantz's Blue and White party 33. President Rivlin initially selected Mr Netanyahu, the incumbent, as the candidate with the best chance of successfully forming a coalition.

Reacting to Mr Netanyahu's message, Blue and White said: "The time for spin is over and it's now time for action".

Israel's president has suggested a so-called unity coalition of the two main parties. That arrangement could see Mr Gantz as de facto prime minister, while Mr Netanyahu holds onto the position in name only.

Mr Gantz is a former head of the Israeli military, and served in that role while Mr Netanyahu was prime minster. He was propelled to political leadership after forming his party in February, saying that the country had "lost its way".

Mr Netanyahu has far more frontline political experience, but is facing his own battle over corruption. While trying to negotiate his coalition in October, he also attended hearings with the attorney general, who will decide whether or not to charge Mr Netanyahu in indictments for bribery, fraud, and breach of trust.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-50132760.
 
Come on Benny Gantz, work some magic and get Bibi out forever.
 
So earlier this year, Benny Gantz cited the coronavirus as a reason for joining Benjamin Netanyahu in a unity government which split his own party. In return, he'd become Prime Minister in Nov 2021.

Here's a problem with that plan - if a budget cannot be passed then elections are triggered. Of course, what does Netanyahu do ? He hasn't passed a budget :))

Now would fresh elections benefit Netanyahu ? No, Likud are down in the polls, but so is Gantz whose party is polling at 9 seats.

Infact the biggest beneficiary of this deadlock is not the left - it's Naftali Bennett and the far-right. So Netanyahu can easily form a right-wing majority, and Benny Gantz may never become Prime Minister.

Netanyahu is an evil genius. He will be much harder to remove than the other populist right leaders.
 
Israel election: Netanyahu claims 'huge win' for right-wing parties

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has claimed a "huge win" for the right in Israel's fourth election in two years, though exit polls suggest he may fail to secure a majority in parliament.

Mr Netanyahu's Likud party and its allies are projected to get 53 or 54 seats in the 120-seat Knesset.

Parties opposed to the prime minister staying in office look set to win 59.

It means the nationalist Yamina party led by former Netanyahu loyalist Naftali Bennett could act as kingmaker.

It is forecast to win seven or eight seats and has not explicitly declared which side it will support.

"I will do only what is good for the State of Israel," Mr Bennett said in a statement after the exit polls were released.

He added that he had told Mr Netanyahu that Yamina would await the final results before deciding on its next steps.

Israel's Central Elections Committee does not expect all of the votes to be counted before Wednesday afternoon due to coronavirus-related restrictions.

"Israeli citizens - thank you," Mr Netanyahu tweeted late on Tuesday. "You gave a huge win to the right and Likud under my leadership. Likud is the biggest party by far."

"It's clear most Israelis are right-wing, and want a strong, stable right-wing government," he added.

Just over 67.2% of those eligible cast their ballots in the election, which was widely seen as a referendum on Mr Netanyahu's leadership.

The 71-year-old prime minister has been in power continuously since 2009, having served an earlier three-year term in the late 1990s.

His campaign focused on Israel's world-leading Covid-19 vaccination programme and his diplomatic success in normalising ties with some Arab countries.

But his opponents from across the political spectrum argued that he should not remain in office while standing trial on corruption charges. He denies any wrongdoing.

After the previous three elections neither Mr Netanyahu nor his rivals were able to form a stable governing coalition.

The current national unity government, which was the result of a power-sharing deal with Defence Minister Benny Gantz, collapsed in December after just seven months.

Mr Gantz, whose Blue and White party is projected by the exit polls to win seven seats, said on Tuesday that he would "do everything I can to unite the pro-change bloc" - a reference to those wanting a new prime minister.

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-56504661.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-election/no-clear-winner-in-israeli-election-but-netanyahu-could-have-edge-tv-exit-polls-idUSKBN2BE32D?il=0

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to secure a solid parliamentary majority in Israel’s election on Tuesday but a potential deal with a rival rightist could make him the eventual winner, TV exit polls showed. Not even a campaign in which Netanyahu showcased Israel’s world-beating COVID-19 vaccination rollout could break through two years of political deadlock underscored by four elections.

Israel’s centre-left made a better showing than expected, according to the exit polls, after highlighting longstanding corruption allegations against Netanyahu and accusing him of mishandling the pandemic.

But like Netanyahu’s traditional bloc of right-wing and Jewish religious parties, it also came up short of a governing majority in the 120-member parliament.

The stalemate could herald lengthy coalition-building talks or even a fifth election.

On social media, Netanyahu, 71, claimed “a huge victory” for the right-wing and his Likud party. But the TV projections did not bear that out.

The political survival of Israel’s longest-serving leader appeared to rest with 48-year-old Naftali Bennett, a defence minister in a previous Netanyahu government and leader of the nationalist Yamina party. A former Netanyahu aide who has long sought to replace him at the helm, Bennett remained noncommittal about his intentions immediately after polling stations closed.

“I will do only what is good for the state of Israel,” Bennett was quoted as saying by a spokesman.

Bennett, a high-tech millionaire, has said he would not serve under the centre-left group’s most likely leader, 57-year-old Yair Lapid, head of the Yesh Atid party. He also gave no firm public promise during the campaign to join up with Netanyahu, for what exit polls indicated would be only a slim majority.

After the exit polls were broadcast, Bennett said he received a telephone call from Netanyahu and told him, “we will await the final results” before deciding on his next political steps.

Netanyahu also phoned conservative political allies and urged them to join a “strong, stable right-wing government”, a spokesman said.

Netanyahu had campaigned on his leadership credentials based on a programme that has enabled nearly 50% of Israelis to receive two vaccine shots already. But charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, which Netanyahu has denied in his ongoing trial, as well as economic strife Israelis suffered during three nationwide coronavirus lockdowns have weighed on his popularity. Yohanan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute, a non-partisan think tank, said the exit polls showed the country remained divided and that a fifth national ballot remained a real option. “At the same time, if Bennett joins his coalition, Netanyahu is closer than ever to a narrow government including the most extreme elements of Israeli society,” Plesner said.

According to the exit polls, Lapid’s Yesh Atid took second place with 16-18 parliamentary seats to 31-32 for top finisher Likud.

The dominant political figure of his generation, Netanyahu has been in power continuously since 2009. But the Israeli electorate is deeply polarised, with supporters hailing him as “King Bibi” and opponents holding up placards calling him “Crime Minister”.

Israel’s swift vaccine drive allowed it to reopen much of its economy before the election, and Netanyahu had promised voters and businesses more cash stipends and millions more doses of vaccine.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-election/israeli-far-rightists-spurn-islamist-party-clouding-netanyahu-coalition-prospects-idUSKBN2BH1NA

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s prospects of forming a new coalition government after an indecisive election were further complicated on Thursday by a far-right refusal of any prospective parliamentary partnership with an Islamist party.

Partial tallies from Tuesday’s ballot showed Netanyahu’s conservative Likud and ideologically kindred factions short of a majority in the 120-seat Knesset - raising the possibility he would seek some sort of accommodation with the United Arab List.

While political commentators saw inclusion of the UAL - which was forecast to win four seats - in a Netanyahu-led government as unlikely, some predicted the party might instead pledge not to support any opposition no-confidence motions.

In exchange for such protection from an unlikely ally, Netanyahu would agree on measures to improve conditions for Israel’s 21% Arab minority, the commentators said.

But Religious Zionism, an ultranationalist party run by Jewish settlers and forecast to take six seats, indicated Netanyahu could not rely on its support if he reached an arrangement with the UAL, which has pro-Palestinian sympathies.

“No rightist government predicated on UAL will arise. Period. Not (with UAL) on the inside, nor the outside, not through abstention, nor through some other kind of (scheme),” Religious Zionism leader Bezalel Smotrich said on Facebook.

UAL has signalled openness to backing the next government, whether under Netanyahu or his centrist rival Yair Lapid, who with like-minded politicians appears set to control 57 seats.

A Netanyahu-led coalition that includes Religious Zionism controls 52 seats, the partial results show.

“Sometimes coalitions include people who don’t really like each other,” UAL’s Waleed Taha told Israel’s Army Radio.

He said his party was not, at this time, “talking about improving our personal roles” - an allusion to cabinet posts.

Asked if UAL might, from the opposition, provide ad-hoc parliamentary support for a Netanyahu-led coalition with Religious Zionism, Taha said the onus was on the far-rightists.

“If it is acceptable, to the people that you mentioned, that all of the subjects that we raise are accepted, then it would appear they’ve have changed their stripes,” he said.

Another potential kingmaker, former defence minister Naftali Bennett, whose nationalist Yamina party appears to have won seven seats, has been non-committal on which way it may swing.

Final results in the politically polarised country’s fourth election in two years were expected to be announced late on Thursday or on Friday.
 
It's good to roll out an effective vaccination campaign - but voters aren't gonna forget all the other mistakes made in the pandemic.

Netanyahu basically exempted the Ultra Orthodox from social distancing protocols, which caused a fury amongst the more secular voters. And he paid the price, though could still remain as PM.
 
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-israel-election/netanyahu-gets-official-nod-to-form-next-israeli-government-idUSKBN2BS20O?il=0

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu got a new lease on his political life on Tuesday, receiving a mandate from Israel’s president to form a new government after an inconclusive election.

Israel’s longest-serving leader, in power consecutively since 2009, now faces the tough task of breaking an unprecedented political stalemate and enlisting enough allies for a governing coalition.

Under law, Netanyahu will have 28 days to do so, with the possibility of a two-week extension before President Reuven Rivlin picks another candidate or asks parliament to choose one.

Israel’s election on March 23, its fourth in two years, ended with neither a Netanyahu-led right-wing and religious bloc nor a prospective alliance of his opponents winning a parliamentary majority.

But in consultations Rivlin held with political parties on Monday on granting the coalition-building mandate, Netanyahu received more endorsements than his challengers, leading to the president’s televised announcement giving him the nod.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/04/israels-netanyahu-struggles-to-form-government-before-deadline

Benjamin Netanyahu is struggling to form a government in Israel ahead of a midnight deadline, with few signs that the country’s longest-serving leader can end more than two years of political deadlock.

Following an inconclusive snap election on 23 March – the fourth since 2019 – the 71-year-old leader had hoped to clinch what would be a unique and historic partnership in Israeli politics.

Netanyahu sought to forge an agreement between far-right Jewish politicians and a conservative Islamist party, called the United Arab List, or Ra’am in Hebrew.

Without such a deal, the prime minister had few other options to form a majority government of 61 seats in the 120-seat Knesset, Israel’s parliament.

Complicating his efforts and part of the reason for the political stalemate is Netanyahu’s corruption case. While he denies the charges, some politicians have pledged not to serve under a prime minister who is on trial.

Still, as Netanyahu’s rightwing Likud party won the most seats in March, he was tasked by Israel’s president, Reuven Rivlin, to form a government within a mandated 28 days. With that period expiring at midnight on Tuesday, the president has two options.

Rivlin could, as soon as Wednesday, give the opposition leader Yair Lapid, whose Yesh Atid party finished second in the March vote, another 28 days to try to form a government. Or he could ask parliamentarians to vote on a candidate.

Lapid has welcomed the opportunity. He became head of the opposition after his predecessor, Benny Gantz, lost support when he made a power-sharing deal with Netanyahu that ultimately collapsed.

“It’s time for a new government,” Lapid, 57, a former TV host and finance minister, said on Monday. “We can form a government.”

However, there was no guarantee Lapid could bridge vast ideological differences in the Knesset. Meanwhile, Naftali Bennett, who was Netanyahu’s defence minister but has since run against him, has emerged as a potential kingmaker. The far-right politician has said he wants to oust the prime minister and avoid a potential fifth election – the inevitable outcome if no government is formed.

Netanyahu said he had suggested a deal in which Bennett becomes prime minister for a year and then hands back power, but it was swiftly rejected. A similar “rotation” deal between Bennett and Lapid could be a possibility.

Netanyahu is famed for political wizardry and has often appeared on the brink of losing power since he first took office in 1996, only to snatch it back.

“This is a day for people with strong nerves,” Sima Kadmon, a political commentator, wrote in the Yedioth Ahronoth newspaper. “As always, nobody knows what trick Netanyahu intends to pull out of his hat at the last minute.”

However, writing in the competing Israel Hayom newspaper, the commentator Matti Tuchfeld said the Israeli leader was out of options: “Even the greatest magician of all times at some point runs out of rabbits.”
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/netanyahus-deadline-form-government-expires-rivals-eyed-2021-05-04/

Israel's president on Wednesday chose Yair Lapid, a centrist politician and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's strongest rival, to try to form a new government, but his path to success was still uncertain.

Israel's longest serving leader, Netanyahu, 71, has been fighting to hold onto office through four inconclusive elections since 2019.

President Reuven Rivlin, in a televised address announcing his choice of Lapid, said the former finance minister had the pledged support of 56 of parliament's 120 members, still short of a majority.

"It is clear that parliament member Yair Lapid could form a government that has the confidence of the Knesset, despite there being many difficulties," Rivlin said.

The most recent vote on March 23, held while Netanyahu is also on trial for corruption charges he denies, yielded no majority for the prime minister or for a loose alliance of rivals from across the political spectrum aiming to topple him.

A 28-day mandate to put together a coalition ran out at midnight after Netanyahu failed to agree terms with potential right-wing partners, opening the way for Rivlin to assign the task to another member of parliament.

Lapid, 57, also has 28 days to try to form a coalition. He made no immediate comment after Rivlin's announcmement, and Netanyahu, who last lost an election before the turn of the century, was due to make his own address later in the day.

A power-sharing agreement to end the political stalemate has been widely mooted, in which Lapid would rotate in office with ultranationalist Naftali Bennett, 49, of the Yamina party. Rivlin met the two separately on Wednesday, and each put his own name forward to lead coalition talks, the president said.

"I have just spoken to Yair Lapid and informed him that I am entrusting him with forming a government, whether this is a government that he will head at the beginning, or a government headed by someone else first in which he will serve as alternate prime minister," Rivlin said in his address.

Lapid heads the Yesh Atid party, which finished second with 17 parliamentary seats to 30 for Netanyahu's Likud in the March election.

After seeing Rivlin, Bennett went on television to appeal to Netanyahu's current right-wing and religious allies to join a "national unity government", saying he wanted to avoid a new election.

There was no guarantee that a potential patchwork coalition of left-wing, centrist and rightist parties outside Netanyahu's caretaker government could bridge their deep political differences and unseat him.

Netanyahu and his opponents have both courted the support of parties representing Israel's 21% Arab minority, potentially giving them a say over a cabinet for the first time in decades.

Five of the Joint Arab List's six legislators threw their support behind Lapid in a letter which the party sent to Rivlin on Wednesday, backing which the president noted in his speech.

But that would still leave Lapid short of a parliamentary majority, unless Bennett's party partnered with him, too.

Much of the impasse results from Netanyahu's legal troubles: some prospective allies have pledged not to serve under a prime minister who is on trial.

Failure to break the deadlock would lead to a new election, adding to political turmoil while Israel faces challenges from Iran's nuclear programme and pursues economic recovery after a swift rollout of COVID-19 vaccine.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/israels-odd-couple-rivals-who-could-topple-netanyahu-together-2021-05-06/

One is a centre-left avowed secularist who says the Palestinians should get a state. The other is a firebrand of the religious hard right who wants to annex most of the occupied West Bank. Meet the men from Israel's opposite political poles who could topple Benjamin Netanyahu.

If Israel's longest serving prime minister is brought down after four inconclusive elections in two years, it will not be because his opponents rallied the nation behind a new political programme. It will be because two men who agree on little else have decided to make a deal.

After Netanyahu failed to meet a deadline to assemble a coalition, the mandate to form a government passed this week to Yair Lapid, 57, a telegenic former TV news anchor who writes pop songs and thrillers, and speaks as the voice of Israel's secular middle class.

But the only way he can form a government is if he wins support from his antithesis, Naftali Bennett, 49, a pugnacious former army commando turned tech millionaire and darling of the religious settler movement.

Lapid, who has 28 days to form a coalition, is expected to offer Bennett the chance to take the first turn as prime minister under a rotation agreement that would let Lapid take charge later. That would match an offer Netanyahu already made to Bennett, which Bennett has so far rejected. Despite drawing their support from opposing political camps, Lapid and Bennett have maintained warm personal relations since they both stormed into politics in 2013 as voices of a new generation and muscled their way into Netanyahu's coalition.

Both have been known to take a guitar on stage to belt out a folk tune. When they served together briefly in Netanyahu's cabinet, they called each other "my brother".

Lapid never returned to Netanyahu's government after a short stint as finance minister. Bennett has been back in two other roles as Netanyahu has pushed further right.

The March 23 election demonstrated how polarised Israel's electorate is over Netanyahu.

He is adored by his conservative base even while on trial for corruption - he denies all wrongdoing. But his Likud party lost seats despite a campaign that highlighted Netanyahu's role in Israel's world-beating COVID-19 vaccination rollout.

"We need a government that will reflect the fact that we don't hate one another. A government in which left, right and centre will work together to tackle the economic and security challenges we face," Lapid said on Wednesday, promoting himself as a unifying figure.

Lapid has said he will seek a coalition with a patchwork of parties from across the political spectrum, with the explicit aim of removing Netanyahu once and for all.

But that commitment could be tested by Bennett, a former Netanyahu aide whose right-wing supporters share many of the prime minister's aims. While he speaks often about a fresh start, Bennett has never explicitly said Netanyahu must go.

Although not a settler himself, he strongly backs the agenda of Jews who live on West Bank land, saying he would grant Palestinians wide autonomy but never an independent state.

But unlike some of his former allies on the religious right, Bennett is comparatively liberal on issues such as gay rights and the relationship between religion and the state, areas in which he could find common ground with Lapid.

Bennett's post-election message of unity and healing has echoed that of Lapid. A fifth divisive election, he said, would "wreck the country".

Any "unity government" would have to avoid making substantive policy on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Bennett has said, instead focusing on reviving the COVID-hit economy and implementing education and business reforms.

Complicating the picture, any Lapid-Bennett government would also have to rely on at least tacit support of parties representing Israel's 21% Arab minority, potentially giving them a say over a cabinet for the first time in decades.

Whether they could stomach Bennett at its head - or Bennett's party comrades would accept their support - are both unanswered questions.

If any piece of the puzzle fails to fall into place, Netanyahu will surely be ready to fight another day.

"It is still too early to declare the dawn of a new day or the end of the Netanyahu era," Tal Shalev, a political correspondent for the Walla news website, wrote on Thursday. "He is still far from turning off the light."
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/netanyahu-poised-gain-political-lifeline-violence-flares-2021-05-13/

Civil unrest between Jews and Arabs in Israel dealt a strong blow to efforts by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's opponents to unseat the Israeli leader after a series of inconclusive elections.

Naftali Bennett, head of the ultranationalist Yamina party, said he was abandoning efforts to form a coalition with centre and left-wing parties to form a new government.

The post-election landscape remains largely the same: Netanyahu was given a chance to form a government, and failed. Now the main anti-Netanyahu bloc led by Yair Lapid's centrist Yesh Atid - 'There is a Future' - party also has no obvious route to putting together a majority in the 120-member Knesset.

Bennett, a rightist who was always an unlikely bedfellow with the more moderate Lapid, said he was abandoning those coalition talks in favour of putting together a wider unity government in the nation's interests at a time of crisis.

It leaves open the very real possibility of another election - an unprecedented fifth in just over two years.

Analysts said the collapse of the Lapid-Bennett partnership in the wake of the violence on Israeli streets may give Netanyahu extra time to make a political move to stay in power.

"From the moment (the fire) was lit, the government of change was dead and Netanyahu came back to life," commentator Ben Caspit wrote in the newspaper Maariv on Friday.

Lapid has three weeks left to try to form a governing coalition. A "rotation" deal in which Lapid and Bennett would take turns as prime minister had been mooted, but it would need the backing of Arab legislators for a parliamentary majority.

Bennett was quoted by Israeli media on Thursday as saying the current strife with Israel's 21% Arab minority would make such a government unfeasible.

Current cross-border hostilities between Israel and Palestinian militants in Gaza have been accompanied by violence in mixed communities of Jews and Arabs in Israel. Synagogues have been attacked and street fights have broken out, prompting Israel's president to warn of civil war.

Mansour Abbas, who heads the United Arab List party, said on Channel 12 TV that Bennett phoned him to say a so-called "government of change" with Lapid was now "off the table".

In a televised address, Lapid voiced regret at Bennett's decision but said he would continue his efforts to put together a coalition.

Israeli political commentators gave him little chance of success.
 
End of Netanyahu era could be in the cards in Israeli political drama

After four inconclusive parliamentary elections in two years, a 28-day mandate for opposition leader Yair Lapid to form a new government runs out on Wednesday, and media reports said he was close to putting together a coalition that would end Netanyahu's 12-year stretch as prime minister.

Israel was gripped by political drama on Sunday over the possibly imminent end of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s record run as the country’s leader.

After four inconclusive parliamentary elections in two years, a 28-day mandate for opposition leader Yair Lapid to form a new government runs out on Wednesday, and media reports said he was close to putting together a coalition that would end Netanyahu’s 12-year stretch as prime minister. Lapid’s chances of success rest largely with far-right politician Naftali Bennett, a kingmaker whose Yamina party has six key seats in parliament.

Bennett, 49, was widely expected to announce, possibly as early as Sunday, whether he would team up with Lapid, who leads the Yesh Atid party.

But first, Bennett would have to rally his own party’s legislators behind joining what Netanyahu’s opponents have
described as a government of “change” comprising factions from the left, centre and right.

Still short of a parliamentary majority after a March 23 election that ended in stalemate, such a diverse grouping could be fragile, and would require outside backing by Arab members of parliament whose political views differ sharply from Yamina’s.Bennett has maintained public silence in recent days, with Likud party chief Netanyahu fuelling speculation his own tenure was about to end in a tweet and video on Friday.

“Real Alert,” he wrote, warning that a dangerous “left-wing” administration was in the cards.Yamina announced late on Saturday that Bennett would meet and update its legislators on Sunday, after reports he had agreed to a deal in which he would serve first as prime minister before handing over to centrist Lapid.A former defence minister, Bennett has reversed course before over ousting Netanyahu, 71, a right-wing leader in power consecutively since 2009 and now on trial on corruption charges that he denies.

With an agreement with Lapid widely reported to have been finalised just before fighting erupted on May 10 between Israel and Gaza militants, Bennett said during the hostilities he was abandoning efforts to form a coalition with the centre and left.But a ceasefire is holding, a recent wave of street violence in Israel between Arabs and Jews has ebbed, and a Lapid-Bennett partnership could be back on course.Israeli political commentators, however, were taking nothing for granted.

“The anti-Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu government of change is still not an accomplished fact,” political columnist Yossi Verter wrote in the left-wing Haaretz newspaper on Sunday.”It’s premature to pop open the champagne, and also too early to wear sackcloth,” he said, questioning whether Yamina’s lawmakers could withstand pressure from the right against a deal with Lapid.

If Lapid, 57, fails to announce a government by Wednesday, a fifth Israeli election since April 2019 – a prospect Bennett has said he wants to avoid – is likely.

https://indianexpress.com/article/world/end-of-netanyahu-era-could-be-in-the-cards-in-israeli-political-drama-7336657/
 
Looks like Netanyahu will be sent packing.

Unfortunately his successor Naftali Bennett is a far-right pro-settler annexationist and a racist. He'll serve for two years before handing over to Yair Lapid.
 
A key Israeli opposition party has backed a unity government that would bring to an end Benjamin Netanyahu's time as the country's longest serving prime minister.

The ultra-nationalist leader Naftali Bennett said his party would join talks to form a governing coalition with centrist party leader Yair Lapid.

Mr Lapid has until Wednesday to announce the result of his efforts.

Mr Netanyahu, meanwhile, said the proposed deal would "weaken Israel".

The prime minister, who is on trial for fraud, fell short of a decisive majority at a general election in March. It was the country's fourth inconclusive vote in two years - and again Mr Netanyahu failed to secure coalition allies.

Mr Bennett, who leads the Yamina party, made his announcement in a televised address.

"I will do everything to form a national unity government with my friend Yair Lapid," he said.

The proposed coalition would bring together factions from the right, the left and the centre of Israeli politics. While the parties have little in common politically, they are united in their desire to see Mr Netanyahu's time in office come to an end.

Speaking shortly after Mr Bennett's announcement, the prime minister said the former defence minister approach would be "a danger for the security of Israel". He did not elaborate.

Centrist party leader Yair Lapid (L) is reportedly close to reaching a deal with the ultra-nationalist leader Naftali Bennett

Mr Lapid, a former finance minister, was given until 2 June to form a new coalition government after Mr Netanyahu failed to do so. His Yesh Atid party came second to Mr Netanyahu's right-wing Likud at the last election.

Mr Bennett's party hold a crucial six seats in the 120-member parliament that would give the proposed opposition coalition a clear majority.

On Saturday night, Mr Netanyahu's Likud party made an offer to Mr Bennett and the leader of another potential coalition party to share the premiership in a three-way split.

However, his offer was rejected. But the prime minister repeated the same option on Sunday.

Under Israel's electoral system of proportional representation, it is difficult for a single party to gain enough seats to form a government outright. Smaller parties are usually needed to make up the numbers needed for a coalition.

BBC
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/may/31/israel-opposition-presses-ahead-as-netanyahu-scrambles-to-block-ousting

The far-right Israeli politician Naftali Bennett will be the country’s next prime minister under a proposed power-sharing deal intended to oust Benjamin Netanyahu, the head of the opposition has confirmed.

Yair Lapid said in a speech on Monday that his efforts to forge a coalition of ideologically opposed parties could lead to a new government within days, and with it, Netanyahu’s removal from office after 12 years in power.

“We can end this next week,” Lapid said. “In a week the state of Israel can be in a new era with a different prime minister.”

In his speech and for the first time, Lapid referred to Bennett, a far-right religious nationalist and strong advocate for the settler movement in the Palestinian territories, as the “intended prime minister”.

A source in Lapid’s Yesh Atid party confirmed that the deal would lead to Bennett becoming prime minister first, and later handing power to Lapid. The source said an agreement on how they would split a four-year term was not final.

Netanyahu’s political rivals are rushing to cement a deal to oust him before a Wednesday deadline, as the prime minister and Israel’s longest-serving leader scrambles to frustrate their attempts.

The announcement of the Lapid-Bennett partnership, first made on Sunday, was a blow to Netanyahu, not only as Bennett was an erstwhile ally but because his Yamina party’s seven seats in parliament could be critical to helping Lapid form a government, giving Bennett the status of kingmaker.

Negotiations between Yamina and Lapid’s party, Yesh Atid, continued until the early hours of Monday and resumed later in the day.

However, further political wrangling is needed for Lapid to form a 61-seat majority in the 120-seat parliament, the Knesset. He has already made preliminary deals with several other parties, from the establishment Labor and anti-occupation Meretz parties to Yisrael Beiteinu, a hardline party led by a Moldova-born settler, Avigdor Lieberman.

Lapid said there were “still plenty of obstacles in the way of the formation of the new government”. On Monday, there were competing requests from Lieberman and another opposition party head, Benny Gantz, for control of the agricultural ministry.

Crucially, Lapid is likely to need outside backing from Arab members of parliament, possibly Islamists, who he hopes will set aside ideological differences for the shared aim of dethroning “King Bibi”, as Netanyahu is known.

“The government of change we are trying to form isn’t a compromise. It’s a goal,” Lapid said last week. “It is the thing that Israel needs today like we need air to breathe. We need a government where right, left and centre work together as a way of life.”

While Lapid is a self-proclaimed centrist, he has also described himself as a “security hawk” and provided only tepid encouragement to the prospect of ending the occupation. His fragile and ideologically diverse government would be expected to focus on the economy and the pandemic while avoiding addressing the fate of millions of Palestinians living under Israeli rule.

If Lapid succeeds before midnight on Wednesday, he could inform the country’s president, Reuven Rivlin, that he believes he can form a government, which would then go to the Knesset for a vote. The swearing-in of the new government could happen within a week.

If the deal is successful, it could end both a political deadlock that has brought four snap elections since 2019 and Netanyahu’s stretch as prime minister.

Netanyahu’s Likud party won the most seats in a March election and was given 28 days to build a majority coalition government but failed to do so. To block Lapid, he has sought to embarrass rightwing politicians such as Bennett, accusing him of abandoning voters.

“A government like this is a danger to the security of Israel, and is also a danger to the future of the state,” Netanyahu said on Sunday of the Lapid-Bennett deal. One member of Bennett’s Yamina party has already refused to join an anti-Netanyahu coalition.

If Lapid fails to announce a government, a fifth Israeli election later this year is a possible outcome.
 
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/jun/02/isaac-herzog-israels-new-president-is-softly-spoken-veteran-of-centre-left

Isaac Herzog’s election by MPs as Israel’s new president, set against the backdrop of coalition deliberations that could seal the end of Benjamin Netanyahu’s long grip on power as the country’s prime minister, is a neat piece of symmetry and certainly symbolic.

As Allison Kaplan Somer put it in the left-leaning Haaretz newspaper, Herzog is as close to “royalty” as Israel’s political system can conceive, part of the once-dominant Ashkenazi elite – referring to Jews who arrived from Europe – who shaped the Israeli state for decades after its founding in 1948.

The son of Irish-born Chaim Herzog, who served as president from 1983 to 1993, his grandfather Rabbi Yitzhak Halevi Herzog was the first chief rabbi of Ireland for more than a decade, before becoming chief rabbi of Palestine, and then Israel, from 1936 until 1959.

His uncle Abba Eban, perhaps the country’s most famous diplomat, was Israel’s foreign minister and ambassador to the United Nations and to the US.

The Knesset’s 120 MPs chose Herzog over Miriam Peretz, who is seen as closer to the country’s conservative and nationalist political camp, to succeed the popular Reuvin Rivlin, who comes from the same rightwing Likud party as Netanyahu but was seen as his foe. The vote will inevitably be interpreted as yet more evidence of the end of the Netanyahu era and the politics that he defined.

Netanyahu has cast the left-leaning milieu from which Herzog emerged as the enemy, in his appeal to generally more conservative Mizrahi Jews – such as Peretz – who came from places such as Morocco and have suffered widespread discrimination.

The once-powerful Labour party that Herzog, a well-heeled lawyer, had led, lost influence in the reconfiguration of Israeli politics towards the right under Netanyahu.

Herzog is unusual in the macho, often cut-throat world of Israeli politics in that he is perceived as being more softly spoken, respectful, and even bland than many of his contemporaries. Some observers have blamed this trait for his failure to achieve his first ambition of becoming prime minister.

Herzog’s political career began as Ehud Barak’s cabinet secretary between 1999 and 2000. He then ran for the Knesset on the Labour slate between 2003 and 2018, climbing the ladder with various ministerial posts until ascending to lead the party from 2013-18 – making his unsuccessful run for prime minister in 2015.

After losing the party leadership, in 2018 he was named chairman of the Jewish Agency, a high-profile body that liaises between Israel and the Jewish diaspora, in a role that helped him continue to cultivate political connections and to take the stage nationally and internationally with ceremonial flourish.

Netanyahu, who unsuccessfully opposed Rivlin’s ambitions for the same role, did not express a preference between Herzog and Peretz before the election. Some observers suggested he did not want to back the wrong horse for president, a position that holds the power to pardon criminal offences under the country’s “basic laws”.

For now, the question is whether Herzog’s election marks any sign of a change in Israel’s political weather – at least, in terms of domestic politics.

What is clear is the ambition. In his first speech following his election, Herzog said he intended “to build bridges” within Israeli society and with the Jewish diaspora and “safeguard the foundations of our democracy” – processes that Netanyahu has been accused of undermining.
 
Its likely the new PM will be the same man who put up a photo of a Pakistani building , claiming its Hamas headquarters.

Choose an extremist is an Israeli election.
 
Israel: Benjamin Netanyahu's 12 years in power set to end as rivals agree to form coalition government

Israel appears to be on the brink of a new political era after an awkward coalition of parties from across the political spectrum announced it had formed a government.

Taking negotiations up to the wire, opposition leader Yair Lapid informed the country's president late on Wednesday that he had struck a power-sharing deal with a broad grouping of right, centre and centre-left parties.

The formation of a 'change government' should, in theory, bring to an end 12 years in power for Mr Netanyahu and two years of political stagnation with four inconclusive elections but there are still hurdles to jump.

Under the deal, Mr Lapid, a former journalist turned centrist politician, has agreed that the right-wing leader of the much smaller Yamina party, Naftali Bennett, will serve as prime minister for the first two years before handing the leadership to Mr Lapid.

The coalition's only real unity comes in wanting to remove Mr Netanyahu. And it's fragility was proven in the final hours before a deal was reached.

Members of Mr Bennett's Yamina party have been under huge pressure from their supporters not to join a government with the centre-left. The party's deputy, Ayelet Shaked, had her security increased in recent days because of death threats.

Ms Shaked has been attempting to secure concessions from Mr Lapid including obtaining a seat on the committee which appoints judges.

https://news.sky.com/story/israel-b...s-agree-to-form-coalition-government-12323411
 
Israeli opposition parties have reached an agreement to form a new government that would end Benjamin Netanyahu's 12-year tenure as prime minister.

Yair Lapid, leader of the centrist Yesh Atid party, announced an eight-faction coalition had been formed.

Under a rotation arrangement, the head of the right-wing Yamina party, Naftali Bennett, would serve as prime minister first before handing over to Mr Lapid.

There still needs to be a parliamentary vote before the government is sworn in.
In a statement, Mr Lapid said he had informed President Reuven Rivlin of the agreement, adding: "I pledge that this government will work in the service of all Israeli citizens, those who voted for it and those who did not.

"It will respect its opponents and do everything in its power to unite and connect all parts of Israeli society."

An image carried on Israeli media showed Mr Lapid, Mr Bennett and Arab Islamist Raam party leader, Mansour Abbas, signing the agreement, a deal many thought impossible.

This is the first time in decades an Arab-Israeli party has joined government. Other parties representing Arab-Israelis - who make up 20% of the population - have said they will oppose a government led by Mr Bennett, who rejects the concept of a Palestinian state, AFP news agency reports.

Mr Abbas told reporters: "The decision was hard and there were several disputes but it was important to reach agreements." He said that there were "many things in this agreement for the benefit of Arab society".

In his note to the president, Mr Lapid said he would head the government alongside Mr Bennett, who he would replace as prime minister on 27 August 2023.

Mr Rivlin has called on parliament to convene as soon as possible to hold the confidence vote.

If the coalition fails to win the support of a majority in the 120-seat Knesset, there is a risk of the country having to go to elections for the fifth time in two years.

The coalition members span the full spectrum of Israeli politics. The parties have little in common politically apart from their plan to replace Mr Netanyahu.

They are:

Yesh Atid (centrist) - led by Yair Lapid (17 seats)
Kahol Lavan (Blue and White) (centrist) - led by Benny Gantz (eight)
Israel Beiteinu (centre-right to right-wing nationalist) - led by Avigdor Lieberman (seven)
Labor (social-democratic) - led by Merav Michaeli (seven)
Yamina (right-wing) - led by Naftali Bennett (seven)
New Hope (centre-right to right-wing)- led by Gideon Sa'ar (six)
Meretz (left-wing, social-democratic) - led by Nitzan Horowitz (six)
Raam (Arab Islamist) - led by Mansour Abbas (four)
All eight factions were needed to pass the 61 majority figure.

Wednesday's marathon talks took place in a hotel near Tel Aviv, with a large number of issues - from legalising cannabis to fines for illegal construction to the rotation of judicial selection committee posts - all on the agenda.

Israeli media suggested that not all the elements were finalised, and this could still create doubts over whether the coalition will win its confidence vote.

Mr Netanyahu's right-wing Likud party won the most seats in March's inconclusive poll, but he was unable to form a governing coalition after being given the mandate.

Mr Netanyahu had called the proposed new government the "fraud of the century", saying it endangered the state and people of Israel.


media captionNaftali Bennett and Benjamin Netanyahu traded barbs during their televised appearances on Sunday
The BBC's Middle East editor, Jeremy Bowen, says that Mr Netanyahu's defeat was sealed not by left-wing opponents but by fellow right-wingers he had made into enemies by his ruthless, high-handed tactics.

No-one should expect big, new initiatives from the coalition, our correspondent says, adding that just surviving the onslaught Mr Netanyahu is undoubtedly planning will be a full-time job.

BBC
 
Seems like they have somehow managed to find a person for the PM role who might be an even bigger extremist nutcase than Netanyahu.
 
Seems like they have somehow managed to find a person for the PM role who might be an even bigger extremist nutcase than Netanyahu.

This is exactly how their process works.


The incoming PM is even worse than Netanyahu.

Naftali Bennett: ‘I’ve Killed Lots Of Arabs In My Life And There’s No Problem With That’

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/naftali-bennett-kill-arabs_n_3670767


He also stated that, "creation of a Palestinian state would be suicide for Israel."

We can clearly see that the Zionists have no peace plan and neither any intention to stop the brutal war crimes against Palestinian civilians.
 
Few Israelis wanted a leader to the right of Netanyahu. Naftali Bennett is set to oust his old boss anyway.

After the 2019 elections, Naftali Bennett's right-wing party failed to cross the electoral threshold and had no seats in Israel's parliament.

Two years later, he's on the verge of becoming the country's next prime minister.

A former chief of staff to then-opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu, Bennett could now unseat his former boss, bringing an end to Netanyahu's run as the country's longest serving prime minister.
Bennett has signed onto a historic coalition agreement with centrist leader Yair Lapid who brought together a wide swath of political parties as part of a change coalition to oust Netanyahu, including a far left party and even for the first time in Israeli history, an Arab-Israeli party. If Israel's parliament signs off on the deal in the coming days, Bennett will take the top job for the first two years of a four-year term, followed by Lapid.

He will sit alongside politicians with completely opposing ideologies to his own.
Bennett lies to the right even of Netanyahu in several crucial areas. He would carry into office a history of incendiary remarks about Palestinians and a well-documented ambition to annex part of the occupied West Bank.

Few Israelis voted for Bennett's Yamina party in March elections, picking up just 7 seats compared to Netanyahu's 30. But Bennett found himself the kingmaker, wooed by both Netanyahu and Lapid who needed his party's support in order to form a majority.
How much of his agenda Bennett can achieve while constrained in an awkwardly assembled coalition remains to be seen. But if the deal stands, the Yamina leader -- for so long a supporting character in Israel's high-stakes political spectacle -- could become a major player on the world scene.

A staunch critic of the two-state solution

Born in Haifa to immigrants from San Francisco, Bennett served in an elite unit of the Israel Defense Forces, before studying law at Hebrew University. He then became an entrepreneur, launching a tech start-up in 1999 which he later sold for $145 million.
He entered Israeli politics under Netanyahu's wing years later, though the two fell out after he was dismissed as chief of staff in 2008. Bennett made his own name nationally in 2013 as the leader of the pro-settler party Jewish Home, making his desire to prevent the formation of a Palestinian state a central plank of his pitch to voters. After a merger with another party, he rebranded the party "Yamina" in 2019.

Over the coming years Bennett held several posts in Netanyahu's various governments, including as minister of Defense, while continuing to outflank Netanyahu on issues relating to the Palestinian territories.

Is it finally the end for Benjamin Netanyahu, the great survivor of Israeli politics?
Is it finally the end for Benjamin Netanyahu, the great survivor of Israeli politics?
"The old models of peace between Israel and the Palestinians are no longer relevant. The time has come to rethink the two-state solution," he wrote in a 2014 op-ed in the New York Times.
"The era of these negotiations is over," he told CNN the same year. "The approach that we've been trying for twenty years now clearly has reached its end."
He has consistently held firm to his opposition to a two-state resolution since then, citing security and ideological concerns as his reasoning.

In 2018, he said that if he were defense minister, he would enact a "shoot to kill" policy on the border with Gaza. Asked if that would apply to children breaching the barrier, the Times of Israel reported that he replied: "They are not children -- they are terrorists. We are fooling ourselves."
During the most recent conflict between Israel and Hamas-led militants in Gaza, Bennett said the Palestinians could have turned Gaza "into a paradise."
"They decided to turn it into a terrorist state," Bennett told CNN's Becky Anderson last month, before a ceasefire was agreed. "The moment they decide that they don't want to annihilate us, this all ends."
Unlikely bedfellows

Bennett has railed against government regulation of the private sector and labor unions.
"If there is one thing I would want to achieve over the next four years, it is to break up the monopolies here and to break the stranglehold the big unions have on the Israeli economy," he told the Guardian in 2013.
On a handful of other issues, he is considered comparatively liberal. Despite his religious background, during the most recent electoral campaign he said that gay people should "fully have all the civil rights a straight person in Israel has," the Times of Israel reported -- though he also said that didn't mean he would take action to ensure legal equality.

In recent months, Bennett has become a thorn in Netanyahu's side, fiercely criticizing his pandemic handling as well as the country's interminable political deadlock.
Four elections in two years have left the country in flux, with Netanyahu simultaneously appearing to be both stubbornly unmovable yet perpetually on the cusp of losing power.
Bennett told CNN last month that compared to his time in the tech sector and in the military, Israel's politics was "quite a mess."

Right-wing Bennett described centrist Yair Lapid (R), his new coalition partner, as his "friend."
"After four elections and a further two months, it has been proven to all of us that there is simply no right-wing government possible that is headed by Netanyahu," Bennett said in a speech on Sunday, shortly before he reached a deal with Lapid, a man he now refers to as his "friend."

The two are unlikely bedfellows. A charismatic former TV anchor, Lapid has expressed support for a two-state solution with the Palestinians as well as moves to reduce the influence of religion in Israel, including by creating civil marriages.

How much of his personal ideology Bennett can enact, should he succeed in becoming prime minister, is an open question.
He has already hinted that the government would rely heavily on compromise to function. "The left is making difficult compromises to allow me ... to become prime minister," he said Sunday. "Everyone will have to postpone the realization of some of their dreams."
But in the coming days, Bennett will be focused on achieving a more immediate dream.
The coalition agreement must pass a vote of confidence in the Knesset, Israel's parliament, before a new government and Prime Minister are sworn in.

According to Israeli law, the Knesset must also hold a vote of confidence within a week of being formally notified of a new government being formed. This step might not happen until Monday, which means the vote could be held as late as June 14.
That means there's still time for Netanyahu and his allies to convince members of parliament to defect from the coalition, or somehow tie things up procedurally in parliament. A collapse of the ceasefire with the Hamas-led militants in Gaza or another outside event could also topple the burgeoning new government.

But if Bennett and Lapid's coalition can hold firm, they would bring weeks (or years) of political maneuvering to a close -- and pull off a once improbable deal that would elevate Bennett to Israel's highest office.

https://edition.cnn.com/2021/06/04/middleeast/naftali-bennett-israel-profile-intl-cmd/index.html
 
Strange bedfellows in the current situation but if Israel was not an apartheid, Jewish supremacist state then an Arab religious party would be a natural coalition partner for ultra religious Jewish political parties.
 
a must watch video, mehdi hasan - Meet Israel’s Likely New Prime Minister -Naftali Bennett much better

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/IZgDj4h3SBA" title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jun/06/dont-expect-netanyahu-departure-to-alter-the-course-of-politics-in-israel

It would be encouraging to think that the massive upheaval afoot in Israeli politics with the unseating of Benjamin Netanyahu also signals a seismic shift in political culture. Perhaps a turning point in its democratic decline, even a move towards ending its rule over millions of Palestinians.

Unfortunately, it signals none of these things. The burning desire to depose Israel’s longest serving leader is certainly the driving force behind the disparate eight-party coalition that hopes to replace him. But another factor also unites them – by default, if not by design: the consensus that in determining the future of the Jewish state, the conflict with the Palestinians can be managed in perpetuity.

Netanyahu, more than any other Israeli leader, has promoted this idea, cementing it so fast within the national consciousness that it may be his most enduring legacy.

It is a sign of how invisible the Palestinians now are in Israeli politics that even the truly historic inclusion of an Arab party in the coalition has not introduced them on to the agenda. Islamist party Ra’am is using its four seats to extract some narrow gains for its own constituency but, like all the other partners, has agreed not to become entangled in the whole Palestinian issue for the purposes of avoiding friction.

For a long time, the decades-long occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip did play a central role in Israeli politics and in a national debate over the direction of the Zionist project. Even after the failure of the Oslo accords, successive prime ministers at least stayed theoretically loyal to the idea of implementing a two-state solution.

Netanyahu did something different. He sold Israelis the idea that the occupation of millions of unwilling Palestinians could be managed as an inconvenience rather than an existential threat.

The Arab spring and the Syrian civil war not only shifted global attention away from Israel-Palestine but gave weight to Netanyahu’s premise that now was not the time to even consider the creation of a Palestinian statelet. Amid lurid warnings that Israel’s policies would make it the pariah of the west, Netanyahu pursued stronger economic and diplomatic ties with less fastidious partners in Africa, Asia and eastern Europe.

And life was good. No matter how much European liberals decried its human rights record, Israel’s economy continued to soar, singer Netta won the Eurovision song contest in 2018 and the Jewish state ushered in the world’s most successful coronavirus vaccine programme.

Donald Trump’s warm embrace, with the US embassy’s move to Jerusalem, the annexation of the Golan Heights and a sequence of peace deals with Arab monarchies, seemed to validate Netanyahu’s entire strategy.

In the midst of such national success, it’s not a hard narrative to sell to your constituents – that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict is uniquely intractable and because of eternal Palestinian intransigence, the problem must be managed or at best shrunk rather than resolved.

That is not so different from the view of Yair Lapid, the leader of the largest bloc and slated to become prime minister in 2023 if by some miracle the coalition lasts until then. The Mondeo Man of Israeli politics, he represents a huge and significant constituency of centrist, secular citizens. But they want civil marriage, subsidised childcare and for buses to run on Jewish holidays more than they want to confront an occupation with little impact on their day-to-day lives.

As for Naftali Bennett, the potential next prime minister and once Netanyahu’s political protege, he has done more than anyone to rebrand the whole image of the settlement enterprise within Israel. He transformed the staunch party of religious Zionism from a clutch of dusty old hilltop zealots to one that claimed to offer a home to all Jews, including, like himself, urbanites in hi-tech businesses. The argument that the overriding impetus for control over the Palestinian territories was not religious fanaticism but security proved a concept much more palatable to the wider Israeli public.

The presence in the coalition of the fragmented rump of the Zionist left, leaping at the chance to finally regain some kind of political relevance, will also not revive the Palestinian issue. Labour and Meretz have nothing fresh to offer, clinging to the idea of the two-state solution as a kind of magical thinking to perpetuate their dream that Israel can be both Jewish and democratic.

The Netanyahu years have shown that aim to be an illusion. Under his rule, the Jewish nature of the state was repeatedly privileged over its democratic character, with incremental assaults on the judiciary, civil society and the media. The political force that has coalesced to unseat him shows no sign of wanting to, let alone intending to, reverse that democratic decline.

Netanyahu long co-opted the old Zionist truism that got the fledgling state through war and internal strife – the secret weapon of “ein brera” (there is no choice). Under Netanyahu, there was no choice beyond him and no choice beyond keeping the status quo. The choices that come now may change very little.
 
Israel's PM Benjamin Netanyahu Alleges "Greatest Election Fraud"


Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made his sweeping accusation at a time when Israel's domestic security chief has warned publicly about the prospect of political violence.

Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Sunday a newly formed Israeli coalition that is poised to unseat him was the result of "the greatest election fraud" in the history of democracy. He made his sweeping accusation at a time when Israel's domestic security chief has warned publicly about the prospect of political violence.
Netanyahu focused his allegations on a broken campaign promise from the man set to replace him as prime minister, nationalist Naftali Bennett. Bennett had pledged not to partner with left-wing, centrist and Arab parties, but on Wednesday announced with opposition leader Yair Lapid that they had formed a governing coalition with factions from across the political spectrum.

Under a rotation deal, Bennett will serve first as prime minister, followed by Lapid.

No date has been set for a vote in parliament to approve the new government, which follows an inconclusive March 23 election, but it is widely expected to be sworn in on June 14.

"We are witnessing the greatest election fraud in the history of the country, in my opinion in the history of any democracy," Netanyahu said in comments to legislators of his right-wing Likud party.

"That's why people justifiably feel deceived and they are responding, they must not be shut up," he said in the remarks, which were broadcast live and referred indirectly to Bennett's campaign promise not to team up with Lapid and others.

Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving leader, has been in office since 2009, and his tenure has been clouded by an ongoing corruption trial, in which he has denied any wrongdoing. The prospective new government caps political jockeying since the election - Israel's fourth in two years.

People angry at the alliance have held protests outside the homes of opposition politicians, whose security has been beefed up after threats on social media.

ENDANGERING ISRAEL

In a rare public warning, the head of the Shin Bet internal security agency said on Saturday that increasingly extreme online discourse could lead to violence.

While condemning violence and incitement, Netanyahu, 71, repeated his designation of the Lapid-Bennett coalition as a dangerous leftist alliance. "This government is endangering Israel with such a danger the likes of which we have not seen for many years," he said. "We, my friends and I in Likud, we will vehemently oppose the establishment of this dangerous government of fraud and surrender And if, God forbid, it is established, we will bring it down very quickly."

Netanyahu said the politically diverse new coalition would not be able to stand up to the United States if Washington returns to a nuclear deal with Iran nor deal forcefully with Gaza's Hamas militants, who engaged Israel in 11 days of cross-border fighting last month.

He also criticised Facebook and Twitter, saying the two social media platforms, which he uses extensively, had been blocking legitimate right-wing criticism of the Lapid-Bennett coalition.

Netanyahu said Facebook had removed a right-wing post that included the address of a legislator where a protest had been set to take place

He said a left-wing post that listed the same address but called on demonstrators to support the lawmaker had not been taken down.

"It's a scientific case, simply scientific, clinical, that proves an attempt to shut up the right-wing," Netanyahu said.

Twitter did not immediately respond to a request for comment

A spokesperson for Facebook said: "Privacy and the protection of personal information are important to helping people feel safe on our services. Under our global Community Standards, we do not allow people to post personal or confidential information about others, including people's addresses and phone numbers, therefore we remove such content once we become aware of it."

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/israels-pm-benjamin-netanyahu-alleges-greatest-election-fraud-2457806
 
And now it was a stolen election apparently.

Netanyahu pulling the Trump card lol.

He is literally trying every trick in the book to save himself.
 
And now it was a stolen election apparently.

Netanyahu pulling the Trump card lol.

He is literally trying every trick in the book to save himself.

Yup same playbook. He made comments on Facebook essentially rallying his supporters to do something similar to Jan 6th Insurrection here in the US.
Israel's Shin Bet (internal security) Director issued a rare public statement that such incitement would lead to nation wide violence.
 
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/new-israeli-government-seals-coalition-deals-netanyahu-era-approaches-its-end-2021-06-11/

The new Israeli government set to end Benjamin Netanyahu’s 12-year tenure as prime minister signed its final coalition agreements on Friday, pointedly including term limits.

The coalition of parties from far-right to left is expected to focus mostly on economic and social issues rather than risk exposing internal rifts by trying to address major diplomatic issues such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving leader, will be succeeded on Sunday by a coalition that includes for the first time a party from Israel's Arab minority.

Under a power-sharing agreement, Naftali Bennett, of the ultra-nationalist Yamina (Rightwards) party, will serve as prime minister for two years.

Bennett on Friday said the coalition "brings to an end two and a half years of political crisis", although it was unclear how long the coalition's disparate elements would hold together. He will then hand over to Yair Lapid of the centrist Yesh Atid (There is a Future) party.

Among the agreements outlined by parties in what Lapid described as a "unity government" are:

  1. An infrastructure push to include new hospitals, a new university and a new airport
  2. Passing a two-year budget to help stabilize the country's finances - the prolonged political stalemate has left Israel still using a pro-rated version of a base 2019 budget that was ratified in mid-2018
  3. Maintaining the "status-quo" on issues of religion and state, with Bennett's Yamina party to have a veto. Possible reforms include breaking up an ultra-Orthodox monopoly on overseeing which foods are kosher, and decentralizing authority over Jewish conversions
  4. An "overall plan for transportation" in the Israeli-occupied West Bank
  5. A general goal to "ensure Israel's interests" in areas of the West Bank under full Israeli control - allocating more than 53 billion shekels ($16 billion) to improve infrastructure and welfare in Arab towns, and curbing violent crime there
  6. Decriminalizing marijuana and moving to regulate the market
 
Israel's parliament is expected to approve the formation of a new government, ending 12 years of rule by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The prospective government - an unprecedented coalition of parties - has a razor-thin majority of one seat.

It would also end more than two years of political paralysis in which three elections resulted in stalemate.

Right-wing nationalist Naftali Bennett is poised to become PM in a power-sharing deal with a centrist leader.

Under the coalition agreement, Mr Bennett, who heads the Yamina party, will hold office until September 2023, when he will hand over to Yair Lapid, leader of Yesh Atid, for a further two years.

Mr Netanyahu - Israel's longest-serving leader, who has dominated its political landscape for years - would remain head of the right-wing Likud party and become leader of the opposition.

He has railed against the likely new government, calling it a "dangerous coalition of fraud and surrender" and has vowed to "overthrow it very quickly".

Meanwhile, his trial on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust - allegations he denies - continues.


BBC
 
Benjamin Netanyahu has lost his 12-year hold on power in Israel after the country's parliament voted in a new coalition government.

A new "government of change" will be led by right-wing nationalist Naftali Bennett of the Yamina party.

He will lead an unprecedented coalition of parties which was approved with a razor-thin majority of 60-59.

Mr Bennett will be prime minister until September 2023 as part of a power-sharing deal.

He will then hand power over to Yair Lapid, leader of the centrist Yesh Atid, for a further two years.

Mr Netanyahu - Israel's longest-serving leader who has dominated its political landscape for years - will remain head of the right-wing Likud party and become leader of the opposition.

Speaking in the Knesset debate, he said: "If it's our destiny to be in the opposition, we'll do so with our heads high until we take down this bad government, and return to lead the country our way."

For his part, Mr Bennett, who leads Yamina, thanked Mr Netanyahu for his service to the country and pledged never to allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons.

BBC
 
So, the new party is a right-wing nationalist one and the first thing the leader mentioned was never letting Iran get nuclear weapons. I'm sure the Palestinians are celebrating right now.
 
So, the new party is a right-wing nationalist one and the first thing the leader mentioned was never letting Iran get nuclear weapons. I'm sure the Palestinians are celebrating right now.

On the other hand an Arab party is part of the new government for the first time.
 
Cant see the new coalition working out too long with both hardliners & Arab parties in the mix... it will take one incident of Jew-Arab flare up for the coalition to fall apart like a house of straws. Bibi will be back soon!
 
Cant see the new coalition working out too long with both hardliners & Arab parties in the mix... it will take one incident of Jew-Arab flare up for the coalition to fall apart like a house of straws. Bibi will be back soon!

exactly or an even more hard right govt, the Arab party is being set up to fail
Miko Peled expalins it really well here

 
My god, does Palestinians know what kind of horror they are in for with this new guy ? If they thought Netanyahu was bad, this is going to be scary.
 
Israel's new Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, has promised to unite a nation frayed by years of political stalemate.

He said his government would "work for the sake of all the people", adding that the priorities would be reforms in education, health and cutting red tape.

The right-wing nationalist will lead an unprecedented coalition of parties that won a confidence vote by a razor-thin margin of just one seat on Sunday.

He succeeds Benjamin Netanyahu, who was forced out of office after 12 years.

Mr Bennett, the leader of Yamina party, will be prime minister until September 2023 as part of a power-sharing deal.

He will then hand power over to Yair Lapid, head of the centrist Yesh Atid party, for a further two years.

Mr Netanyahu - Israel's longest-serving prime minister - will remain head of the right-wing Likud party and become leader of the opposition.

During Sunday's debate in the Knesset (parliament) in Jerusalem, a defiant Mr Netanyahu promised: "We'll be back."

The new coalition was approved by 60 votes to 59, with one abstention.

After the vote, Mr Netanyahu walked over to Mr Bennett and shook his hand.

In his speech, Mr Bennett, 49, said: "This is not a day of mourning. There is a change of government in a democracy. That's it.

"We will do all we can so that no-one should have to feel afraid... And I say to those who intend to celebrate tonight, don't dance on the pain of others. We are not enemies; we are one people."

Representatives of the Palestinians have reacted dismissively to Israel's new government.

"This is an internal Israeli affair. Our position has always been clear, what we want is a Palestinian state on the 1967 borders with Jerusalem as its capital," a spokesman for Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas said.

"It is an occupation and a colonial entity, which we should resist by force to get our rights back," said a spokesman for Hamas, the Islamist militant group that controls Gaza.

US President Joe Biden sent his congratulations to Mr Bennett, saying he looked forward to strengthening the "close and enduring" bilateral relationship.

BBC
 
Far-right Israeli groups will march in and around East Jerusalem's Old City today (Tuesday) in a flag-waving procession that risks igniting tensions with Palestinians in the contested city and rekindling fighting between Israel and Gaza.

Assailing the march as a “provocation”, Palestinian factions have called for a “Day of Rage” in Gaza and the Israeli-occupied West Bank. Gaza's Islamist rulers Hamas have warned of renewed hostilities if it goes ahead.

“We warn of the dangerous repercussions that may result from the occupying power's intention to allow extremist Israeli settlers to carry out the Flag March in occupied Jerusalem tomorrow,” Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh said on Twitter.

An original march was re-routed to avoid the Old City's Muslim Quarter on May 10 when tensions in Jerusalem set off 11 days of deadly violence.

Israeli rightists accused their government of caving into Hamas by changing its route. They rescheduled the procession after a Gaza truce took hold.

Today's march poses an immediate challenge for new Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, who took office on Sunday and brought veteran leader Benjamin Netanyahu's record-long rule to an end.

Bennett's internal security minister approved the march on Monday.

A route change or cancellation of the procession could expose Bennett's patchwork coalition to accusations from Netanyahu, now in the opposition, and his right-wing allies of giving Hamas veto power over events in Jerusalem.

“The time has come for Israel to threaten Hamas and not for Hamas to threaten Israel,” prominent far-right lawmaker Itamar Ben-Gvir said on Twitter.

An official route for the march is yet to be announced. Israeli media reported that police will allow participants to congregate outside the Old City's Damascus Gate but will not let them cross through it to the Muslim Quarter, which has an overwhelmingly Palestinian population.

Tensions are sure to be high whether or not the route is changed. Palestinian protests were planned for today evening across the Gaza Strip, and Hamas and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas's Fatah faction have called on Palestinians to flock to the Old City to counter the march.

The Israeli military has made preparations for a possible escalation in Gaza over the march, Israeli media reported, and the US Embassy in Jerusalem prohibited its employees and their families from entering the Old City on Tuesday.

Palestinians want East Jerusalem, which includes the Old City, to be the capital of a state they seek to establish in the occupied West Bank and Gaza.

Israel, which annexed East Jerusalem in a move that has not won international recognition after capturing the area in a 1967 war, regards the entire city as its capital.
 
New Israel government vows change, but not for Palestinians

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's best hope for maintaining his ruling coalition which consists of eight parties from across the political spectrum will be to manage the conflict, the same approach favored by his predecessor, Benjamin Netanyahu, for most of his 12-year rule. But that method failed to prevent three Gaza wars and countless smaller eruptions.


The the newly established Jewish outpost of Eviatar is seen from the Palestinian village of Beita, south of the West Bank city of Nablus, Monday, June 14, 2021.(AP Photo/Majdi Mohammed)
Israel’s fragile new government has shown little interest in addressing the decades-old conflict with the Palestinians, but it may not have a choice.

Jewish ultranationalists are already staging provocations aimed at splitting the coalition and bringing about a return to right-wing rule. In doing so, they risk escalating tensions with the Palestinians weeks after an 11-day Gaza war was halted by an informal cease-fire.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s best hope for maintaining his ruling coalition which consists of eight parties from across the political spectrum will be to manage the conflict, the same approach favored by his predecessor, Benjamin Netanyahu, for most of his 12-year rule. But that method failed to prevent three Gaza wars and countless smaller eruptions.

That’s because the status quo for Palestinians involves expanding settlements in the occupied West Bank, looming evictions in Jerusalem, home demolitions, deadly shootings and an array of discriminatory measures that two well-known human rights groups say amount to apartheid. In Gaza, which has been under a crippling blockade since the Hamas militant group seized power in 2007, it’s even worse.

“They talk about it being a government of change, but it’s just going to entrench the status quo,” said Waleed Assaf, a Palestinian official who coordinates protests against West Bank settlements. “Bennett is a copy of Netanyahu, and he might even be more radical.”

Bennett said little about the Palestinians in a speech before being sworn in on Sunday. “Violence will be met with a firm response,” he warned, adding that “security calm will lead to economic moves, which will lead to reducing friction and the conflict.”

Environment Minister Tamar Zandberg, a member of the dovish Meretz party, told Israeli television’s Channel 12 that she believes the peace process is important, but that the new government has agreed, “at least at this stage, not to deal with it.”

The government faces an early challenge on Jabal Sabeeh, a hilltop in the northern West Bank where dozens of Jewish settlers rapidly established an outpost last month, paving roads and setting up living quarters that they say are now home to dozens of families.

The settlement, named Eviatar after an Israeli who was killed in an attack in 2013, was built without the permission of Israeli authorities on land the Palestinians say is privately owned. Israeli troops have evacuated settlers from the site three times before, but they returned after an Israeli was killed in a shooting attack nearby early last month.

Clearing them out again would embarrass Bennett and other right-wing members of the coalition, who already face fierce criticism and even death threats for allying with centrist and left-wing factions to oust Netanyahu.

The government faces a similar dilemma over a parade through east Jerusalem organized by ultranationalists that is due to be held Tuesday. The march risks setting off the kind of protests and clashes that helped ignite last month’s Gaza war.

Meanwhile, Palestinians from the adjacent village of Beita have held regular protests against the settlement outpost. Demonstrators have thrown stones, and Israeli troops have fired tear gas and live ammunition. Three protesters have been killed, including 17-year-old Mohammed Hamayel, who was shot dead Friday. Initial reports said he was 15.

“I always taught him you should stand up for your rights without infringing on the rights of others,” his father, Said, said at a mourning event attended by dozens of villagers. He described his son as a popular teenager who got good grades and was a natural leader.

“Thank God, I’m very proud of my son,” he said. “Even in martyrdom he distinguished himself.”

The villagers fear that if the outpost remains, it will eventually swallow up even more of their land, growing and merging with some of the more than 130 authorized settlements across the occupied West Bank, where nearly 500,000 settlers live.

“We’re not a political game in the hands of Bennett or Netanyahu,” said Mohammed Khabeesa, a resident who says he owns land near the settler outpost that he can no longer access without a military permit.

“The settlements are like a cancer,” he said. “Everyone knows they begin small, and then they take root and expand at people’s expense until they reach our homes.”

A spokeswoman for the settler organization behind the outpost did not respond to a request for comment.

Israel captured the West Bank, east Jerusalem and Gaza in the 1967 Mideast war, territories the Palestinians want for a future state. The settlements are seen by the Palestinians and much of the international community as a major obstacle to peace because they make it nearly impossible to create a contiguous, viable state of Palestine alongside Israel.

Every Israeli government since 1967 has expanded the settlements, and this one is unlikely to be an exception. Bennett briefly served as head of a major settler organization, and his party is one of three in the coalition that strongly support settlements.

Hagit Ofran, an expert on settlements with the Israeli rights group Peace Now, says the settlers have always used illegal outposts to challenge Israeli authorities, a trend she expects to accelerate under the new government.

“Because the settlers feel this government is not their government, challenging it, psychologically, will be much, much easier,” she said.

She hopes the new government will at least put the brakes on larger settlement projects, including massive infrastructure that will pave the way for future growth.

“I think it’s more easy politically to stop big budgets and big projects rather than evicting an outpost,” she said. “I would rather see that the government is stopping the big projects rather than fighting over every hilltop. The settlers have the opposite interest.”

https://indianexpress.com/article/world/new-israel-government-vows-change-but-not-for-palestinians-7359932/
 
Talk about a "Coalition of Chaos" - don't see this lasting a full term.
 
And he's back....

===============================================

Israel elections: Netanyahu in lead, exit polls say

Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is on course for victory in Tuesday's elections, according to exit polls.

The polls, which forecast the outcome before official results, give his right-wing bloc a slim majority of seats over his opponents.

Such a result would mark a dramatic comeback for Mr Netanyahu, toppled last year after 12 straight years in power.

The election was widely seen as a vote for or against Mr Netanyahu's return.

Official results, which could still produce a different outcome, are expected in the coming hours.

As the polls were announced at 22:00 (20:00 GMT) upbeat music burst from loud speakers at the central venue of Mr Netanyahu's Likud party in Jerusalem.

"It's a good start," said Mr Netanyahu in a video broadcast by Israel's Kan 11 channel.

Mr Netanyahu, 73, is one of Israel's most controversial political figures, loathed by many on the centre and left but adored by Likud's grassroots supporters.

He is a firm supporter of Israel's settlement-building project in the West Bank, occupied since the 1967 Middle East war. Settlements there are considered illegal under international law, though Israel disputes this.

He opposes the creation of a Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict - a formula supported by most of the international community, including the Biden administration in the US.

Mr Netanyahu is also currently on trial for alleged bribery, fraud and breach of trust - charges he fiercely denies. His possible partners in a Likud-led coalition government have said they would reform the law, in a move which would bring a halt to his trial.

Israel TV exit polls suggest Mr Netanyahu's bloc will command 61 or 62 seats in the 120-seat knesset (parliament).

"It looks like we can be optimistic and have some hope we are about to get a stable coalition with Bibi [Mr Netanyahu] as the prime minister," said 34-year-old Likud supporter David Adler, from Jerusalem.

"But as it's been in the past three years, nothing is sure until the coalition is set up," he cautioned.

According to the polls, Likud stands to be the biggest party, with 30-31 seats, commanding a majority with the support of nationalist and religious parties.

The centre-left party of incumbent Prime Minister Yair Lapid, who brought down Mr Netanyahu in elections last year, is forecast to win 22-24 seats.

Likud's ultra-nationalist ally Religious Zionism appears to have won 14 seats, which would make it the third largest party. Its leaders have gained notoriety for using anti-Arab rhetoric and advocating the deportation of "disloyal" politicians or civilians.

"It will be better now," said Religious Zionism supporter, Julian, at the party's venue in Jerusalem. "When [Religious Zionism politician Itamar Ben-Gvir] will be minister of public security, it will be even better - he'll bring back security to the people of Israel. That's very important."

However, political scientist Gayil Talshir, from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, warned that if the exit polls "reflect the real results, Israel is on its way to become Orban's Hungary", recently branded an "electoral autocracy" by the EU.

If the polls are confirmed, it will stave off the prospect of a sixth election in just four years after analysts predicted deadlock.

It would mark a remarkable turnaround for Mr Netanyahu, whose political future was widely written off after Mr Lapid formed an unlikely alliance of ideologically diverse parties to take power in June 2021.

At the time, Mr Netanyahu vowed to bring it down as quickly as possible. He engineered its collapse after just 12 months.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-63459824
 
What a strange country.

I strongly disagree with Bibi’s Zionist views but he is some political survivor.
 
Netanyahu and far right allies win Israeli election
Former PM Benjamin Netanyahu set to form a government and seal a dramatic return to power, as Lapid concedes defeat.

A coalition led by the right-wing former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has won a majority of seats in the 120-seat parliament, or Knesset, allowing the controversial figure to return to power.

Final election results announced on Thursday show that Netanyahu and his ultranationalist allies – many of whom were considered beyond the pale in Israeli politics only a few years ago – won 64 seats in the 120-seat parliament, with 32 of those seats going to Netanyahu’s party, Likud.

On Wednesday, when roughly 85 percent of the votes had been counted, Netanyahu had told supporters that they were “on the brink of a very big victory”, and promised to form a “stable, national government”.

His opponents in the current coalition, led by Yair Lapid, the centrist current prime minister, won 51 seats, with the remainder held by a small unaffiliated Arab party.

Lapid congratulated Netanyahu and instructed his staff to prepare an organised transition of power, his office said on Thursday.

“The State of Israel comes before any political consideration,” Lapid said. “I wish Netanyahu success, for the sake of the people of Israel and the State of Israel.”

The results mean that Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption, will be invited by Israeli President Isaac Herzog to form a government, a process that is likely to begin next week.

Netanyahu will have 28 days to form what is expected to be the most right-wing Israeli government in history.

His coalition partners, the Religious Zionism party, won 14 seats.

The party’s leaders will now attempt to translate that strong showing into senior government posts for its members, including positions responsible for security.

That is despite the far-right nature of the party’s leadership – one figure, Itamar Ben-Gvir, has called for Palestinians “disloyal” to Israel to be expelled and is a former member of the banned Kach party, which is considered a “terrorist” organisation in Israel.

Ben-Gvir was also previously convicted of racist incitement and had a picture in his office of Baruch Goldstein, an Israeli-American who killed 29 Palestinians in the Ibrahimi Mosque massacre in Hebron in 1994.

However, Netanyahu, who was prime minister for 12 years between 2009 and 2021, owes the Religious Zionism party for its support, after he was abandoned by former allies, such as Naftali Bennett.

Bennett, a fellow right winger who was once seen as Netanyahu’s protege, formed a coalition with politicians from across the Israeli spectrum, as well as a party representing Palestinians in Israel, to keep Netanyahu out of power in March 2021.

That alliance, centred on opposition to Netanyahu, proved impossible to keep together, and eventually broke down in June, prompting the latest elections, Israel’s fifth since 2019, which were held on Monday.

The victory represents a reversal of fortunes for Netanyahu, who was also prime minister between 1996 and 1999.

One of the main reasons for the opposition to him was his legal troubles – he faces corruption and fraud charges, allegations he denies.

The Religious Zionism party has said that, if it comes into government, it will work to remove the offence of “fraud and breach of trust”, which is among the crimes Netanyahu has been charged with.

While it is unclear whether this could then retroactively be applied to Netanyahu’s own trial, the plans indicate an upcoming battle with Israel’s judiciary, which has been increasingly painted as an enemy by Netanyahu’s bloc.

Al-Jazeera
 
The international march of hard-right populism continues :(
 
Netanyahu formally tasked with forming new Israeli government

JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu received an official mandate on Sunday to form a new government and pledged that he would seek national consensus after an election in which Jewish far-rightists surged, drawing concern at home and abroad.

Tasking Netanyahu with building the next coalition, President Isaac Herzog noted that Israel's longest-serving premier had received enough recommendations from like-minded parties to secure 64 of parliament's 120 seats.

That puts the conservative Netanyahu on the path to one of the most stable governments in years, after an 18-month hiatus during which he was replaced by a rare but fragile alliance of centrist, liberal, nationalist and Arab politicians.

"I intend to work to broaden the zone of consensus among us," Netanyahu said in televised remarks at Herzog's residence, adding that he would represent all Israelis "without exception".

He asserted that there was already widespread agreement on Israel's Jewish identity but that individual liberties should also be upheld - an apparent allusion to its 21% Arab minority as well as secular liberals.

MSN
 
Itamar Ben-Gvir: Israeli far-right leader set to join new coalition

srael's far-right Jewish Power party has signed a coalition agreement with Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party.

Its leader, Itamar Ben-Gvir, is set to become national security minister under the deal.

The ultra-nationalist politician is known for his anti-Arab comments and has a past conviction for racism.

It comes after Likud and its religious and far-right allies won a majority in an election earlier this month, marking a dramatic comeback for Mr Netanyahu.

"We took a big step tonight toward a full coalition agreement, toward forming a fully, fully right-wing government," Mr Ben-Gvir said in a statement after the deal was agreed.

Negotiations with other potential coalition partners are continuing.

Mr Ben-Gvir is a controversial figure in Israel. He was a follower of the late, explicitly racist, ultra-nationalist Meir Kahane, whose organisation was banned in Israel and designated as a terrorist group by the United States.

In the past, he has called for the deportation of citizens considered "disloyal".

While he has attempted rebrand himself as a more conventional politician, he still takes an extremely hard line on security issues.

This year has seen increased tension between Israelis and Palestinians, with gun and knife attacks targeting Israelis, and Israeli military raids killing Palestinian gunmen and civilians in the occupied West Bank.

On Wednesday, a teenager was killed and 14 people were injured in two suspected bomb attacks at Jerusalem bus stops. Mr Ben-Gvir visited the site of the first explosion.

"Even if it's in the West Bank, lay siege to them and go from house to house in search of guns and restore our deterrence power," he said during the visit.

Mr Ben-Gvir is a controversial figure in Israel. He was a follower of the late, explicitly racist, ultra-nationalist Meir Kahane, whose organisation was banned in Israel and designated as a terrorist group by the United States.

In the past, he has called for the deportation of citizens considered "disloyal".

While he has attempted rebrand himself as a more conventional politician, he still takes an extremely hard line on security issues.

This year has seen increased tension between Israelis and Palestinians, with gun and knife attacks targeting Israelis, and Israeli military raids killing Palestinian gunmen and civilians in the occupied West Bank.

On Wednesday, a teenager was killed and 14 people were injured in two suspected bomb attacks at Jerusalem bus stops. Mr Ben-Gvir visited the site of the first explosion.

"Even if it's in the West Bank, lay siege to them and go from house to house in search of guns and restore our deterrence power," he said during the visit.

BBC
 
Israel's Netanyahu Secures Majority In Parliament, Close To Form Government

Israel's incoming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu secured a parliamentary majority on Thursday after his Likud party said it had reached an agreement with the Jewish ultra-Orthodox Shas party.

Netanyahu's right-wing alliance won a comfortable victory in a Nov. 1 election, Israel's fifth in less than four years. His partnership with far-right parties has stirred concern at home and abroad.

"We have completed another step towards the formation of a right-wing government that will act to serve all of Israel's citizens," Netanyahu said in the statement.

The agreement with Shas gives Netanyahu control over 64 of the Knesset's 120 seats, though a final coalition deal has yet to be signed.

According to the agreement, Shas leader Aryeh Deri will head the interior and health ministries during the first half of the government's term, then take up the finance ministry in the second half. Deri will also serve as deputy prime minister throughout Netanyahu's tenure.

Deri, a veteran politician, was convicted of tax fraud last year but spared jail under a plea deal. The Knesset will have to pass legislation that would enable his return to the cabinet.

NDTV
 
Every Israel government is a far right one. It is a myth saying that they have any other.
 
Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu Gets 10 More Days To Form Government

Israel's presidency today granted prime minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu a 10-day extension to clinch a coalition deal, as post-election negotiations with his right-wing allies grind on.

The November 1 election put Netanyahu in a position to form a stable government after an unprecedented period of political deadlock that forced five elections in less than four years.

President Isaac Herzog on November 13 tapped veteran politician Netanyahu to form a government with a majority backing of extreme-right and ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties.

The premier-designate appealed to the president Thursday to extend the coalition deadline, which had been set to expire at midnight (2200 GMT) Sunday, and give Netanyahu two more weeks to finalise coalition deals.

Herzog told Netanyahu on Friday he has decided "to extend the timeframe given to you to complete the task of forming a government by 10 days", according to a letter released by the presidency.

The president, who has already expressed reservations about some controversial members of the prospective coalition, said the new government "must work for the entire public in Israel".

In negotiations so far, Netanyahu has already granted top posts to figures like Itamar Ben Gvir, infamous for his anti-Arab views, and the vocally anti-LGBTQ politician Avi Maoz.

Netanyahu's Likud party has signed deals with three extreme-right factions, and must now finalise agreements with the ultra-Orthodox Shas and United Torah Judaism parties by December 21.

By law, the president can grant up to four additional days for negotiations after the extended deadline.

"We are in the midst of negotiations and have made much progress, but judging by the pace of things, I will need all the extension days provided by law in order to form a government," Netanyahu said in his Thursday letter to Herzog.

One of the hurdles that remain is the conviction of Shas leader Aryeh Deri for tax offences, which, according to Israel's attorney general, bars him from a ministerial position.

Netanyahu and his allies may seek to pass legislation allowing Deri to serve in cabinet before firming up a coalition deal.

NDTV
 
Benjamin Netanyahu has said he has successfully secured a deal to form a new coalition government following weeks of negotiations with religious and far-right partners.

In a phone call to President Isaac Herzog moments before a midnight deadline, he said: "I wanted to announce to you that thanks to the amazing public support we received in the elections, I have succeeded in forming a government that will take care of all the citizens of Israel."

His conservative Likud party and religious-nationalist parties close to the ultra-Orthodox and West Bank settler communities won a comfortable majority in Israel's 1 November election - winning a majority of 64 seats in the 120-member Knesset.

But forming a government was held up by disputes over a package of proposed legislation on issues ranging from planning authority in the West Bank to ministerial control over the police.

The new government - which Mr Netanyahu must now present within a week - will take office after a year that has seen the worst levels of violence in the West Bank in more than a decade.

More than 150 Palestinians and more than 20 Israelis have died in the last year.

Mr Netanyahu said he intends to complete the process of forming his government "as soon as possible next week".

He will preside over a coalition dominated by far-right and ultra-Orthodox partners that could alienate large parts of the Israeli public and raise the risk of conflict with the Palestinians.

Itamar Ben-Gvir, once convicted of incitement to racism and supporting a terrorist organisation, has been appointed security minister - placing him in charge of the national police force.

Bezalel Smotrich, who believes Israel should annex the occupied territory, will receive authority over West Bank settlement construction as well as serving as finance minister.

Mr Netanyahu - already Israel's longest-serving prime minister - is on trial for alleged corruption and has spent the last 18 months as opposition leader.

He and his partners are expected to push through a series of laws that will shake up the country's judiciary and could potentially clear him of any charges.

He has claimed to be the victim of overzealous police, prosecutors and judges and denies the charges against him.

SKY
 
Israel's Netanyahu Sworn In As Prime Minister For 3rd Term

Benjamin Netanyahu was sworn in as Israel's prime minister following a vote in parliament Thursday that brought in the most right-wing government in the country's history.

Netanyahu was sworn in a few minutes after his new government was approved, with 63 deputies out of 120 voting in favour of the administration.

Netanyahu formed his government after signing agreements with ultra-Orthodox parties and parties from the far right.

NDTV
 
<b>Netanyahu gov’t says West Bank settlement expansion top priority</b>

<I>Israel’s incoming far-right government made the announcement a day before it is set to be sworn into office.</I>

Benjamin Netanyahu’s incoming hardline Israeli government has put settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank at the top of its list of priorities, a day before it is set to be sworn into office.

Netanyahu’s Likud party released the new government’s policy guidelines on Wednesday, the first of which promises to “advance and develop settlement in all parts of the land of Israel – in the Galilee, Negev, Golan Heights, and Judea and Samaria” – the Biblical names for the occupied Palestinian West Bank.

The commitment could put the new government on a collision course with Israel’s closest allies, including the United States, which opposes settlement construction on occupied territories.

Israel captured the West Bank in 1967 along with the Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem.

The Palestinian Authority (PA) seeks the West Bank as the heartland of a future independent state.

However, Israel has constructed dozens of Jewish settlements, illegal under international law, that are now home to about 500,000 Israelis.

Approximately 2.5 million Palestinians live in the occupied West Bank and have their movements severely restricted by the Israeli military, which operates separate roads designed to be used solely by Jewish settlers.

Netanyahu’s new government – the most religious and hardline in Israel’s history – is made up of ultra-Orthodox parties, a far-right ultranationalist religious faction and his Likud party. It is expected to be sworn in on Thursday.

Several of Netanyahu’s key allies, including most of the Religious Zionism party, are ultranationalist West Bank settlers.

On Wednesday, incoming finance minister Bezalel Smotrich said in an op-ed published by the Wall Street Journal that there would be no “changing the political or legal status” of the West Bank, running contrary to years of advocating annexation of the entire territory.

He levelled criticism at the “feckless military government” that manages civilian affairs for Israeli settlers.

Smotrich, an illegal settler himself, is set to assume control over the military government in the occupied West Bank under his second role – a newly created position as a minister in the defence ministry.

Netanyahu is returning to power after he was removed from office last year, after serving as prime minister from 2009 to 2021. He will take office while on trial for allegedly accepting bribes, breach of trust and fraud, charges he denies.

Netanyahu’s partners are seeking widespread policy reforms that could alienate large swaths of the Israeli public, raise tensions with the Palestinians, and put the country on a collision course with the United States and American Jews.

The administration of US President Joe Biden has said it strongly opposes settlement expansion and has rebuked the Israeli government for it in the past.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2022...s-west-bank-settlement-expansion-top-priority
 
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