The Jerusalem Post

Likud ready to wait for Herzog after Labor race

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

After failing to bring the entire Zionist Union into Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government and not succeeding in splitting the faction and taking part of it, Likud officials have a new goal: Zionist Union head Isaac Herzog by himself.

Talks between Netanyahu and Herzog broke down after Herzog did not succeed in persuading enough of his party’s MKs to join the coalition. The prime minister made a deal with Yisrael Beytenu instead, but he never stopped his effort to lure Herzog into the government.

The Israel Hayom newspaper that is considered pro-Netanyahu reported Friday that the Likud was trying to break up the Zionist Union faction by offering portfolios and other posts to the eight MKs required by law to split a 24 MK faction. Those efforts have not succeeded either.

Senior Likud officials revealed exclusivel­y to The Jerusalem Post Sunday that the new idea is to seek Herzog to come alone. They said that after Yisrael Beytenu’s five lawmakers joined the government, there is no longer a shortage of MKs in the coalition.

What Netanyahu is seeking now is the internatio­nal legitimacy that a respected dove of Herzog’s caliber could provide. For that, the Likud is willing to be patient.

“We can wait,” a senior Likud official close to Netanyahu said. “He might come later. Our door is open for him to come when it suits him.”

Herzog asked Labor secretary-general MK Hilik Bar to reach a compromise date for the next Labor leadership primary

by the end of this week. Herzog’s potential opponents want the race to be held as soon as possible, while he has indicated that he wants it as late as possible.

Nineteen of the Zionist Union’s MKs belong to the Labor Party.

If Herzog will agree to hold the race at the earliest possible date, in August, and he – as expected – loses, Likud officials said he could quit the Knesset and be appointed foreign minister as a profession­al appointee.

Herzog could already be foreign minister in time for the UN General Assembly in September. His father, former president Chaim Herzog, famously ripped up a resolution that called Zionism racism when he was ambassador to the UN.

Isaac Herzog would also be in place for the diplomatic challenges expected during the time between the US election in November and the inaugurati­on of the new president in January.

Herzog’s associates initially laughed at the idea, but then they called it “very creative” and wished the Likud good luck.

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? ISAAC HERZOG
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ISAAC HERZOG

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