China Daily

Task of choosing Israeli PM given to lawmakers

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JERUSALEM — Israeli President Reuven Rivlin asked the parliament on Thursday to choose a new prime minister, giving it three weeks to agree upon a leader or plunge the country into an unpreceden­ted fourth election in just over a year.

Rivlin made the move after his prime minister-designate, former military chief Benny Gantz, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu failed to reach a power-sharing deal by a midnight deadline on Wednesday.

Although the deadline passed, Netanyahu’s Likud and Gantz’s Blue and White party said they would continue their negotiatio­ns toward an “emergency” unity government meant to steer the country through the coronaviru­s crisis.

Under Israeli law, centrist politician Gantz’s failure to put together an administra­tion within the 28 days allotted to him after a March 2 election meant that the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, will now have three weeks to agree on a candidate for the task.

If no nominee is chosen in the next 21 days or if the appointee does not form a government within two weeks of being chosen, parliament will automatica­lly dissolve and a new election will be held.

Further complicati­ng the political picture, Netanyahu, and Gantz, a former armed forces chief, could continue to pursue a deal and rally a parliament­ary majority to support it.

Even as Gantz’s deadline expired, both parties pledged to press on with negotiatio­ns.

“I hope majority of MKs (members of the Knesset) can be found as soon as possible, preventing a fourth round of elections,” Rivlin said on Twitter.

Other options

Netanyahu appears to have gained some leverage. With Gantz no longer holding the presidenti­al “mandate” to put together a coalition, Netanyahu could search for other options.

A total of 59 lawmakers have endorsed Netanyahu, leaving him just shy of a majority in the 120-seat parliament. While continuing to speak to Gantz, he may also try to lure two lawmakers from his opposition in hopes of putting together a narrow government.

Throughout a stalemate in which elections were held in April and September 2019 and last month, Israel has been run by a caretaker government headed by Netanyahu, whose charges in three corruption scandals include bribery, fraud and breach of trust. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Gantz and Netanyahu have been negotiatin­g a deal that would keep Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving leader, in office for another 18 months, after which Gantz would assume the post, Israeli media reported.

Gantz made clean government a central theme of his election campaigns. But he angered many of his voters — and caused a split within his own party — by reneging on a pledge not to serve with Netanyahu, whom he had called “the defendant”.

An opinion poll on Monday from Israel’s Channel 12 news showed Netanyahu’s handling of the coronaviru­s crisis has given him a political boost.

It predicted that if an election were held now, the right-wing Likud would win 40 of parliament’s 120 seats, bolstering Netanyahu’s chances of forming a coalition with traditiona­l right-wing and religious allies, without the need for Gantz’s support.

I hope majority of MKs (members of the Knesset) can be found as soon as possible, preventing a fourth round of elections.” Reuven Rivlin, Israeli president

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