Gantz expected to announce departure from wartime unity gov’t

If the National Unity party’s eight lawmakers do join the opposition, it will not topple the government.

By Troy Osher Fritzhand, JNS

War Cabinet Minister Benny Gantz was expected on Sunday night to announce his National Unity Party’s departure from the government set up in the aftermath of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre and the ensuing conflict.

Gantz will give an address at 8 p.m.

His decision to leave the government was reportedly made on Thursday at a party meeting in Tel Aviv.

Requests for comment from members of Gantz’s party were not immediately answered.

Observers had anticipated that due to the continuing indirect talks with Hamas over a hostages-for-prisoners deal, Gantz might back out of pledge last month to bolt the government by June 8 if no plan for the “day after” Hamas in Gaza was formulated.

The former army chief of staff had been scheduled to speak to the press on Saturday night, supposedly to announce his resignation from the government.

If the National Unity party’s eight lawmakers do join the opposition, it will not topple the government. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would still have a 64-member majority in the 120-MK legislature.

“This is the time for unity and not for division. We must remain united within ourselves in the face of the great tasks before us. I call on Benny Gantz—do not leave the emergency government. Don’t give up on unity,” Netanyahu said on Saturday night, hours after the daring IDF/Border Police/Shin Bet rescue of four hostages from the Gaza Strip.

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Gantz responded: “We have a reason to be happy. We have what and whom we can be proud of. You can imagine the shock of the freed people who suddenly changed their world again, and this time for the better. My friends and I, along with the entire people of Israel, rejoice with the families of the returnees and at the same time strengthen the families who are still awaiting the return of their loved ones.”

At the same time, he continued, “it should be remembered that all the challenges that Israel faces, regarding the return of the other 120 hostages, and regarding the other security challenges in general in the theaters of war, vis-à-vis the region, vis-à-vis the world as well as domestically—remain as they were. Therefore, I say to the prime minister and to the general leadership—it is incumbent upon us to take a serious look at how we can and should proceed from here.”

National Security Minister and Oztma Yehudit Party leader Itamar Ben-Gvir, who has been calling for Gantz’s departure for some time, welcomed the news.

“I will demand that our power be expressed. I need to go back and be a leading force like we were before Gantz came in,” Ben-Gvir said.

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“Gaza must be conquered. We must also fight with Hezbollah [in Lebanon], because there is no alternative. We have contented ourselves enough with peace agreements and disengagement, only through war can they be defeated,” he added.

Otzma Yehudit issued a statement on Thursday saying the party would reverse a June 5 decision to suspend its role in Netanyahu’s coalition “in light of what appears to be Hamas’s rejection of the reckless deal and Gantz’s expected departure from the government.”

Gantz announced in mid-May that he would exit the government unless Netanyahu presented a post-war plan for Gaza. Gantz set the deadline of June 8 for a plan of action accomplishing what he said were six key strategic goals of the war.

He listed these as: Bringing home the hostages; destroying Hamas, demilitarizing the Gaza Strip and establishing Israeli security control there; creating an “international civilian governance mechanism for Gaza” including Palestinians but not Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas or Hamas; returning Israeli residents to the north and rehabilitating the western Negev; advancing normalization with Saudi Arabia; and establishing a new framework for Israelis’ military service.

Then, two weeks ago, Gantz’s party submitted a bill to dissolve the Knesset in an attempt to bring down the government.

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National Unity lawmaker Knesset member Pnina Tamano-Shata, who submitted the motion of no confidence, said, “October 7 is a disaster that obliges us to return and receive the trust of the nation; to establish a broad and stable unity government that can lead us with confidence in the face of major challenges in terms of security, the economy, and especially, in Israeli society.”

Netanyahu’s Likud Party slammed the move, saying in a statement that “in the midst of a war, Israel needs unity and not division.

“Dissolving the unity government would be a reward for [Hamas leader in Gaza Yahya] Sinwar, a capitulation to international pressure and a fatal blow to the efforts to free our hostages,” added the statement.

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