Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Israel’s lawmakers give initial approval for early election

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JERUSALEM: Israeli lawmakers voted overwhelmi­ngly on Wednesday to advance legislatio­n to dissolve parliament and call an early election, after Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said his eight-party coalition was no longer tenable.

The government has said it wants to fast-track parliament’s dissolutio­n but the opposition led by ex-premier Benjamin Netanyahu may attempt to derail the process, in a bid to form a replacemen­t government without the need for what would be Israel’s fifth election in less than four years. The government’s bill still needs to pass a committee vote and three further votes in the full parliament before an early election is called.

In a complex day of legislativ­e manoeuvres that included fiery debate, Israel’s parliament gave near unanimous approval to 11 separate bills to dissolve parliament, drafted by both coalition and opposition lawmakers.

The bills are expected to be united into one, but timelines for that process remain unclear and could depend on Netanyahu’s political calculatio­ns. If final dissolutio­n legislatio­n is approved, new elections could held in late October or early November, according to Israeli reports.

Foreign minister Yair Lapid would take charge as prime minister of a caretaker government, in accordance with a powershari­ng deal he reached with Bennett after 2021 elections, when the pair forged an alliance of ideologica­l rivals united in their desire to oust Netanyahu.

Netanyahu has cheered the coalition’s collapse and vowed to form a new right-wing government, with or without fresh elections. His Likud party has been courting potential defectors from coalition ranks.

A slew of opinion polls conducted after Bennett’s shock announceme­nt late Monday that his coalition could no longer govern pointed to gridlock between supporters and opponents of Netanyahu.

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