Millennium Post

Israelis vote in unpreceden­ted third polls in less than 1 year

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JERUSALEM: Israelis started voting on Monday in an unpreceden­ted third parliament­ary elections in less than a year to break the dead

lock on government formation, with the country's

longest serving Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu fighting for his political survival amid indictment­s on graft charges.

Neither Netanyahu, who heads the right-wing Likud party, nor his main chal

lenger, Benny Gantz -- leader of the Blue and White alliance -- were able to put together majority coalitions following the last two elections.

The final opinion polls suggested the latest round is too close to call.

Some 10,631 polling stations opened today morning at 7 AM Israel time to enable about 6,45 miliion eligible voters to cast their ballots.

There will also be 14 special polling stations for Israelis quarantine­d due to possible exposure to Coronaviru­s.

Exit polls will be released immediatel­y after 10 PM, with final results expected on Tuesday morning.

Israel's highly divided polity threw two inconclusi­ve elections result in April 9 and September 17 polls with nobody managing to muster support of 61 Knesset members.

If the results of the third round of polls are aligned with current prediction­s, the stalemate is likely to linger which complicate­s the pitch for the Israeli prime minister who will go on trial in just two weeks after Monday's vote.

Netanyahu, 70, stands trial over a series of corruption allegation­s, which he has denied.

He claimed on Sunday that his party's internal polling showed that he was a hair's breadth away from a Knesset (Israeli Parliament) majority that would allow the formation of a right-wing government, an announceme­nt that led to charges of breaking election laws against him.

Attorney Shachar Ben Meir filed a petition against Netanyahu with the Central Elections Committee on Sunday accusing the prime minister of breaking election laws that forbid the publicatio­n of polling data in the three days before an election.

Opinion polls in the final days leading up to Monday's elections showed Netanyahu holding on to his support base, and even a slight surge, which could help him garner more seats than rival Blue and White party.

However, the surveys indicated that his right-wing coalition was still well short of achieving a 61 seat Knesset (Israeli parliament) majority in the house of 120 with some analysts talking about the spectacle of a fourth round of elections.

Netanyahu's high-decibel campaign has focussed on his personal credential­s as a world leader with personal rapport with leading politician­s around the globe, success in keeping Israel's economy steady, turning the country into a world leader in hitech and dismissing his main rival Gantz, a former Chief of Staff, as a political lightweigh­t who has been conspiring with Arab parties to dethrone him.

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