Deccan Chronicle

Political novice trying to oust Netanyahu

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Jerusalem, Oct. 22: Former armed forces chief Benny Gantz has a shot at ending Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s record-breaking term in office, but still faces a tough battle to capture the premiershi­p.

Netanyahu announced he could not form a new government following a deadlocked September election, making way for Gantz to try.

But although Gantz’s centrist Blue and White alliance won 33 seats in parliament, one more than Netanyahu’s Likud, he has not so far secured the support of the majority of the 120 lawmakers needed to form a stable coalition. Gantz, a 60-year-old former paratroope­r, had no previous political experience when he declared himself Netanyahu’s electoral rival in December.

Blue and White and Likud each won 35 seats in an April election, but Netanyahu was given the first chance to try to form a majority coalition.

He failed and rather than leaving Gantz to have a go, he opted for a snap second election, held on September 17, despite facing potential indictment for corruption.

This time around, Blue and White inched ahead of Likud, but neither has a clear path to a majority coalition.

“Gantz managed to do what much more experience­d politician­s than him... all failed to accomplish over the years,” analyst Yossi Verter wrote Tuesday in Israeli newspaper Haaretz. But he said that Gantz’s chances of succeeding where veteran political operator Netanyahu had failed were slim. “The election results are familiar to all, and no fairy can appear and magically move blocks around so that they add up to a governing majority,” Verter wrote.

Gantz presents himself as someone who can heal divisions in Israeli society, which he says have been exacerbate­d by Netanyahu. Gantz was born on June 9, 1959, in Kfar Ahim, a southern Israeli village that his immigrant parents, both Holocaust survivors, helped to establish. He joined the army in 1977, completing the tough selection course for paratroope­rs. He went on to command Shaldag, an air force special operations unit. In 1994, he returned to the army to command a brigade and then a division in the occupied West Bank.

He was Israel’s military attache to the US from 2005 until 2009. A security hawk, he is determined like Netanyahu to keep the Jordan Valley in the occupied West Bank under Israeli control and to maintain Israeli sovereignt­y over annexed Arab east Jerusalem.

 ??  ?? Benny Gantz
Benny Gantz

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