With new surveys showing a Netanyahu-led Likud surging, what once seemed his best option—partnering with Gantz—may in fact be his worst.
By Martin Sherman
Otto von Bismarck, (1815-1898), the German statesman credited with the unification of Germany (1871,) and who served as its first chancellor until 1890, famously defined “politics” as “the art of the possible.”
This is certainly true in the dizzyingly volatile kaleidoscope realities of Israeli politics.
Indeed, only few days ago, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was facing the grim prospect of being dispatched to the opposition and the looming specter of a minority government, led by his then-major rival, Blue and White’s Benny Gantz, and totally dependent on the dominantly anti-Zionist Joint List.
However, the dramatic events at the end of last month, when Gantz, together with just over half the MKs of the Blue and White faction, unexpectedly decided to join Netanyahu in an emergency coalition, radically changed the political landscape—and with it, the possibilities open to Netanyahu.
After all, Netanyahu has now effectively neutralized his two major political adversaries, Gantz and Yair Lapid—paradoxically because the former opted to join him, and because the latter opted not to—leaving each with an emasculated political following and a multitude of disappointed and embittered erstwhile supporters.
Moreover, these developments left his third, implacable foe, the recalcitrant Avigdor Liberman, essentially irrelevant, having been deprived of his previous extortionary power.
Now, with new surveys showing a Netanyahu-led Likud surging, outstripping his nearest rivals by a staggering margin of over 20 mandates, what once seemed his best option—partnering with Gantz—may, in fact, be his worst.
Indeed, given Gantz’s reluctance to seize the moment provided by the Trump Plan for extending Israeli sovereignty over the Jordan Valley and portions of Judea-Samaria, and the number of important portfolios necessary to cede to him to entice him into joint coalition, other options may be far more attractive.
These might include setting up a narrow, right-wing coalition with the former right-of-center Blue and White MKs, Yoaz Hendel and Zvi Hauser—in addition to Orly Levy, who broke away from the left-wing Labor-Meretz alliance, giving it a 61 seat majority in the Knesset.
However, if Netanyahu should be loath to entrust his political fate to vagaries of recent rivals, another possibility would be, despite pubic fatigue, going for a fourth election,with polls predicting a clear victory for a Netanyahu-led Likud and his political rivals—divided, disheartened and in disarray—considerably weakened.
After all, politics is the art of the possible!