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Friday, May 31, 2019

Israel in Uncharted Territory as Netanyahu Fails to Form a Coalition

A politically fatigued Israel cranked back into election mode on Thursday, barely 50 days after its last national ballot and after the staggering failure of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to form a government by midnight Wednesday.
With the next vote set for Sept. 17, Israel is in uncharted political terrain. Mr. Netanyahu is Israel’s first prime minister-elect to be unable to form a coalition after an election, and the first to force another one by dissolving a Parliament sworn in just a month previously. His aura of invincibility, formed over a decade in office, has been seriously dented.


Analysts described the chaos as unprecedented, even by the rough standards of Israeli politics. And the morning-after recriminations over who is to blame for the political crisis gave an early taste of the contentious season of campaigning to come.
After the April 9 election, Mr. Netanyahu and his conservative Likud party had seemed poised to easily form a coalition with his right-wing and ultra-Orthodox allies from the previous government. But he got caught in a battle of wills between Avigdor Lieberman, the leader of a small ultranationalist and secularist party, Yisrael Beiteinu, and the powerful alliance of ultra-Orthodox parties over a new military service law that would conscript some ultra-Orthodox men.
Mr. Netanyahu, who was on track to surpass the state founder David Ben-Gurion as Israel’s longest-serving prime minister this summer, could also end up its first to be charged with crimes while in office, with the attorney general considering filing charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three corruption cases. Mr. Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing.
“Our surprise is well earned,” said Yohanan Plesner, a former centrist legislator who is now president of the Israel Democracy Institute, a nonpartisan research group in Jerusalem. “When we look at the right-wing, ultra-Orthodox bloc as a bloc, we understand that actually it’s not as homogeneous as one would have imagined.”
Mr. Lieberman, a blunt and inscrutable politician, held a news conference at noon on Thursday with the air of a winner, taking advantage of the fact that the last election ultimately ended without a true victor. Positioning himself as the champion of the secular right, he tried to tap into the broader resentment in Israeli society over religious coercion and the inequality of military conscription, given the exemptions currently granted to ultra-Orthodox seminary students.
He has held firm that a new military service law should be put into place as drafted, while the ultra-Orthodox parties are seeking changes. Mr. Lieberman also presented himself as a stately figure, appealing for more measured political discourse after Mr. Netanyahu branded him a “leftist” early Thursday morning.
Mr. Lieberman railed against what he called a “campaign of discreditation that began last night and continued at a dizzying pace this morning.” He also accused Mr. Netanyahu’s supporters of nurturing a “personality cult,” and said some of the prime minister’s associates required “a reputed and experienced psychiatrist.”
Earlier, Yariv Levin, a Likud minister who led the party’s coalition negotiations, attacked Mr. Lieberman, whose party won a modest five seats in the 120-seat Parliament, saying he had made excessive demands, including for three ministerial posts, had intended to torpedo the new government from the start out of personal ambition, and had set conditions that he knew the ultra-Orthodox politicians could not meet.
“It’s as if he said: ‘I’m willing to join the government. I just have one demand: that the legislators from United Torah Judaism come eat lunch with me in a nonkosher restaurant,’ ” Mr. Levin told Ynet, a Hebrew website.
Mr. Lieberman’s party responded by saying that Mr. Levin “ought to enter the Guinness World Records as the ultimate liar in the history of Israeli coalition negotiations.”
By precipitating the dissolution of Parliament and calling new elections, Mr. Netanyahu deprived President Reuven Rivlin, an old foe, of the possibility of entrusting another member of Parliament with the task of forming a government.
The main opposition party, the centrist Blue and White, which like Likud won 35 seats in the April election, has refused to join a government with a prime minister facing indictment.
Mr. Plesner, of the Israel Democracy Institute, said that if the president had nominated anybody else from Likud to form a government, that person could have done a deal with Blue and White in “less than a day or perhaps one phone call.”



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