Ottawa Citizen

Netanyahu’s legacy is on the line in elections on Tuesday

As Israelis prepare to vote, Netanyahu’s job is in jeopardy

- JOSEF FEDERMAN

As Israelis prepare to vote in parliament elections on Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu finds himself at a fateful crossroads: Make history or become history.

If Netanyahu can lead his Likud Party to victory and secure a fourth term in office, he will move closer to overtaking the nation’s iconic founding father, David Ben-Gurion, as the longest-ever serving prime minister — and cementing a status as the dominant Israeli politician of the past two decades.

But if Likud stumbles and finds itself in the opposition — a real possibilit­y, according to recent polls — the Netanyahu era could end with a resounding thud, concluding a career that many would say brought few major accomplish­ments beyond longevity. Iran and the internatio­nal community seem headed toward a nuclear deal that Netanyahu abhors, and a resolution to the Palestinia­n issue seems as distant as ever.

“If he leaves office, he won’t leave any dramatic changes,” said Yoaz Hendel, a former aide to Netanyahu. In a turbulent region, one could say “this is the best thing to do,” Hendel said.

The Israeli campaign is widely seen as a choice between two world views: Netanyahu’s focus on Israel’s many security challenges — he has long been a voice calling for zero tolerance of terrorism — or his opponents’ focus on Israel’s social problems and high cost of living. It also touches on his support for Jewish settlement­s in the occupied West Bank, which the opposition and the outside world detest.

But on a basic level, the campaign is simply a referendum on Netanyahu, a polarizing character who is adored as “King Bibi” by his supporters and reviled by his detractors.

The son of a Jewish historian, and scarred by the loss of his brother in a 1976 Israeli commando raid on a hijacked airline in Uganda, Netanyahu often portrays himself — and his country — in historical terms. He laces his speeches with references to Jewish history, tales of Jewish heroism and warnings that Israel’s most sinister enemies lurk around every corner. The main target of his diatribes, Iran, is often compared to biblical enemies and even the Nazis.

“The days when the Jewish people remained passive in the face of genocidal enemies, those days are over,” Netanyahu said in a controvers­ial speech to the U.S. Congress earlier this month. “We are no longer scattered among the nations, powerless to defend ourselves.”

It was vintage Netanyahu, delivered in flawless, American-accented English — developed during a childhood in Philadelph­ia and later as a university student at MIT — and with the gifted oratorical flourish that has made him prominent on the internatio­nal stage.

His stern rhetorical style, often drawing comparison­s to Churchill, has served him well during a threedecad­e career that has included time at the Israeli Embassy in Washington, as ambassador to the United Nations, a series of senior Cabinet posts and a stint as opposition leader. He has spent a total of nine years as prime minister since 1996, and if he can keep the post through mid-2019, he will become the country’s longest-serving prime minister.

But after enjoying a surge of popularity following last summer’s war against Hamas militants in the Gaza Strip, Netanyahu is struggling.

Despite the speech to Congress, his effort to halt the Iranian nuclear program — which he describes as the mission of his lifetime — appear to be stumbling as the U.S. seems to move toward a deal with the Islamic Republic.

The speech, delivered over White House objections, has worsened an already troubled relationsh­ip with U.S. President Barack Obama, boding poorly for the final two years of Obama’s term if Netanyahu is re-elected.

Peace efforts with the Palestinia­ns made no headway during the past six years, and Netanyahu has backtracke­d from his earlier support for a Palestinia­n state. Yet he has not offered an alternativ­e vision for resolving the festering conflict.

Exasperate­d by years of deadlock and fighting, the Palestinia­ns are preparing to file war crimes charges against Israel after the election.

His opponents, meanwhile, have hammered his record on the economy, citing the widening gaps between rich and poor, and portrayed him as out of touch.

Although Netanyahu is still seen by the public as the candidate more suitable to be prime minister, based on his image as the “responsibl­e adult” running the country, the gap between him and his main rival, Isaac Herzog, is closing, according to recent opinion polls.

More importantl­y, Herzog’s Zionist Union has edged ahead. A poll conducted for the Haaretz daily published Thursday, for instance, forecast 24 seats going to Herzog’s party, compared to 21 for Likud.

The poll, conducted by the Dialog agency, interviewe­d 714 people and had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.

Since Israelis vote for parties, not individual candidates, Herzog could be given the first chance to put together a majority coalition in the 120-member parliament. A poor finish for Likud could set the stage for an internal party coup.

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 ??  ILIA YEFIMOVICH/GETTY IMAGES ?? If Benjamin Netanyahu can lead his Likud Party to victory in the coming election and secure a fourth term in office, he will become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister.
 ILIA YEFIMOVICH/GETTY IMAGES If Benjamin Netanyahu can lead his Likud Party to victory in the coming election and secure a fourth term in office, he will become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister.

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