World

Israel eyes end of Netanyahu’s 12-year reign after foes strike deal

New agreement sets PM on defensive against slender opposition majority

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 04 Jun 2021 3:30PM

Israel eyes end of Netanyahu’s 12-year reign after foes strike deal
Analysts warn that with the threat of possible jail time hanging over him in his ongoing trial on corruption charges, Benjamin Netanyahu is unlikely to allow his record 12 straight years to end without a messy fight. – AFP pic, June 4, 2021

JERUSALEM – Israel approaches the end of an era after the last-minute formation of a motley coalition that could in the next few days oust veteran leader Benjamin Netanyahu, the country’s longest-serving prime minister.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid announced the deal just minutes before a midnight Wednesday deadline, prompting celebrations into the early hours by the prime minister’s opponents and a defiant show of support by his fans.

On paper, the prospective coalition commands a slender majority in Parliament but a confidence vote is not expected for several days, giving Netanyahu time to woo potential defectors among the unlikely bedfellows ranged against him.

With the threat of possible jail time hanging over him in his ongoing trial on corruption charges, the 71-year-old is unlikely to allow his record 12 straight years to end without a messy fight, analysts warned.

Yesterday, the master political operator was already on Twitter, seeking to play on any last-minute misgivings among right-wing lawmakers about allying with the left against him.

“All lawmakers who were elected with votes from the right must oppose this dangerous left-wing government,” he said.

On Twitter, Netanyahu’s Likud party called on former right-wing allies to “immediately withdraw” their signatures.

The new coalition would see the religious-nationalist Naftali Bennett serve as prime minister for two years before Lapid, a secular centrist, would take the helm.

Should last-minute defections scupper the “change” alliance, Israel would likely have to hold yet another election, the fifth in just over two years.

“Opening the champagne right now is a bit hasty,” said Tamar Hermann, a political scientist at the Israel Democracy Institute. – AFP, June 4, 2021

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