Windsor Star

Israel edges toward early election

Rival Gantz says Netanyahu using `trickery'

- JEFFREY HELLER

JERUSALEM • Israel edged closer on Wednesday towards a fourth national election in two years after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's main governing partner, Benny Gantz, backed an opposition move to dissolve parliament.

Parliament gave preliminar­y approval to a dissolutio­n bill, but the legislatio­n needs to pass three as yet unschedule­d votes to become law, giving Netanyahu and Gantz, the defence minister, more time to work out difference­s over a national budget.

The coalition crisis could plunge Israel into more political uncertaint­y as it prepares for a new U.S. administra­tion led by Joe Biden, deals with the coronaviru­s pandemic and awaits Iran's next moves after the assassinat­ion of its top nuclear scientist last week, a killing that Tehran blamed on Israel.

With final passage of the dissolutio­n bill still uncertain, the budget dispute could in itself trigger a new election. Under law, failure to pass a budget by a Dec. 23 deadline means Israel would go to the polls in March.

“Benny Gantz has to pull the emergency brake,” Netanyahu, who voted against the bill, said in special televised address after the parliament­ary session.

But Israeli political commentato­rs voiced skepticism that Netanyahu was seeking to save the so-called “unity” government, citing a looming “rotation” arrangemen­t in which Gantz, head of the centrist Blue and White party, is due to take over from Israel's longest-serving leader in November 2021.

Even as that pact was being inked in May, few analysts in Israel believed that Netanyahu, on trial for alleged corruption which he denies, would relinquish his powerful post.

Asked if the handover was still in the cards, Netanyahu, taking questions after his speech, alleged that Gantz had pursued partisan policies violating the spirit of their unity agreement.

Gantz, who has said an election could be averted if Netanyahu carried out the coalition accord's call for a budget covering 2020 and 2021, accused him of “trickery.”

If a 2021 budget needs to be passed separately, Netanyahu would gain another tool to block “rotation” because failure to approve that fiscal package by March would also trigger an election.

Political commentato­rs on Israel's three main TV channels described Netanyahu's address, in which he hailed what he said were a series of health and diplomatic achievemen­ts under his leadership, as an election speech kicking off a campaign.

Strategic timing for an early ballot could be crucial as Netanyahu weighs another fight for political survival after failing to win outright elections in April and September 2019 and in March this year in which Gantz was his main rival.

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