Israeli government set to collapse, trigger new elections

Whether Netanyahu can fend off challengers or not, the country is almost certain to be led by a right-wing politician opposed to coddling the Palestinians.

By Associated Press

Israel’s divided government was heading toward collapse at midnight Tuesday, a step that would trigger the country’s fourth election in under two years and pose an unprecedented threat to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s lengthy grip on power.

Netanyahu finds himself confronted by a trio of disgruntled former aides, led by a popular lawmaker who recently broke away from the prime minister’s Likud party.

Whether Netanyahu can fend off these challengers or not, the country is almost certain to be led by a right-wing politician opposed to coddling the Palestinians, which could thwart attempts by the incoming Biden administration to pressure Israel into painful concessions.

The prospects of Israel’s center-left bloc appear worse than in previous contests because its leader, Defense Minister Benny Gantz, entered into an ill-fated alliance with Netanyahu that is now crumbling.

Gantz lost the support of much of his base.

Netanyahu and Gantz formed their coalition last May after battling to a stalemate in three consecutive elections. They said they were putting aside their personal rivalry to form an “emergency” government focused on guiding the country through the health and economic crises caused by the pandemic.

Under the deal, Gantz assumed the new role of “alternate prime minister” and was assured he would trade places with Netanyahu next November in a rotation agreement halfway through their term.

The immediate cause of Tuesday’s expected collapse was their failure to pass a budget by a midnight deadline. That would cause the parliament to automatically dissolve and set new elections for late March.

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But it really reflected the failure of a partnership plagued by mutual hostility and mistrust from the outset. For seven months, Gantz has suffered a number of humiliations and been kept out of the loop on key decisions, such as a series of U.S.-brokered diplomatic agreements with Arab countries.

Netanyahu accuses Gantz’s Blue and White party of acting as an “opposition within the government.”

Gantz has accused Netanyahu of undermining their power-sharing deal in hopes of remaining in office throughout his corruption trial, which is to kick into high gear in February when witnesses begin to take the stand. He and other critics believe Netanyahu ultimately hopes to form a new government capable of appointing loyalists who could grant him immunity or dismiss the charges against him.

“A criminal defendant with three indictments is dragging the country to a fourth round of elections,” Blue and White said Tuesday night. “If there wasn’t a trial, there would be a budget and there wouldn’t be elections.”

Netanyahu is charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals in which he is accused of offering favors to media figures in exchange for positive news coverage about him and his family.

In the previous three elections, Netanyahu was unable to put together a majority coalition with his traditional religious and nationalist allies. Yet he controlled enough seats to prevent his opponents from cobbling together an alternate coalition.

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According to recent opinion polls, that equation appears to be changing, with a number of rivals poised to control a parliamentary majority without him.

Those rivals are led by Gideon Sa’ar, a stalwart in Netanyahu’s Likud who announced this month that he was breaking away and forming a new party. Sa’ar, who once served as Netanyahu’s Cabinet secretary, has accused the prime minister of turning the Likud into a “personality cult” focused on ensuring its leader’s political survival.

If elections were held today, Sa’ar’s party would finish second behind the Likud, giving him a veto over a Netanyahu-led government, according to polls. Sa’ar has vowed he will not serve under Netanyahu.

Naftali Bennett, another former aide who had a falling out with Netanyahu, leads a religious right-wing party that also has surged in the polls. And Avigdor Lieberman, Netanyahu’s former chief of staff and a longtime Cabinet minister, also says the prime minister is unfit to lead.

All of these rivalries are more personal than ideological, meaning that Israel’s next government — led by Netanyahu or not — almost certainly will have a right-wing ideology that opposes concessions to Palestinians supports Israeli communities and construction in Judea and Samaria.

The recent polls indicate that Gantz, who appealed to left-wing voters in previous elections, may not receive enough votes to even enter the next Knesset.

Yair Lapid, leader of the centrist Yesh Atid party, appears to be gaining some of those voters, but not enough to lead the next government, according to the polls. The left-wing Labor Party, which established Israel and led the country for its first 30 years, is not expected to cross the threshold, while the far-left Meretz party is expected to barely scrape in.

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The Arab-majority Joint List has been plagued by infighting, and it is unclear whether any mainstream party is ready to share power with them. An Arab-led party has never been part of an Israeli government.

In a televised address Tuesday night, Netanyahu blamed Blue and White for the political breakdown, noting that any of his challengers would have to rely on “the left” to form a government without him.

“We are against elections; this is a wrong decision by Blue and White,” Netanyahu said. “But If elections are forced upon us, I promise you we will win.”

In the previous elections, he used his close alliance with President Donald Trump as an electoral asset.

That option will no longer be there after Joe Biden is sworn in as president on Jan. 20. Biden is expected to return to the policies of his former boss, President Barack Obama, who reportedly harbored personal animosity toward Netanyahu.

Netanyahu also must face the voters over his handling of the coronavirus crisis. Netanyahu scored an achievement this week by making Israel one of the first countries in the world to begin vaccinating its population.

But it remains unclear how many people will be vaccinated by March. And with Israel facing a raging outbreak and the possibility of a third lockdown, angry voters could still punish him for the economic damage caused by the pandemic.