The Jerusalem Post

Gantz, Netanyahu to meet today for unity gov’t talks

Liberman: We’ll use our leverage to help the two big parties wake up and form a coalition together

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet for the first time since the former was tasked with forming a government, with a meeting scheduled for Sunday afternoon at the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv.

Gantz and the Blue and White team are expected to tell Netanyahu and Likud that he needs to give up either on being prime minister first in a rotation between them, or on his 55-seat bloc of religious and right-wing parties.

A week of intensive negotiatio­ns is ahead for Blue and White, with its negotiatin­g team meeting its counterpar­ts in Likud and then Yisrael Beytenu on Sunday, and Labor-Gesher and Democratic Union on Tuesday.

Gantz and Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman plan to have a one-on-one meeting on Monday.

Liberman made it clear on Saturday night that, despite his strong criticism of Netanyahu since April, he is not automatica­lly going into a Gantz-led government.

“I don’t have any commitment to Blue and White,” Liberman told Meet the Press on Saturday night. “I assume that in matters of religion and state it’ll be easier for us to agree with Blue and White, but I’m not sure about security issues... [or] about the Palestinia­ns.”

In fact, Liberman did not rule out joining a Netanyahu-led right-wing government, much like the one in which he was defense minister in 2016-2018.

Asked four times about the possibilit­y, Liberman did not say he wouldn’t not join such a government.

Rather, Liberman said: “I believe that in the end the two big parties will wake up... and form a government together. The other partners are less important... I hope it will happen... First, we will do all we can to convince them, and we have leverage, so we will convince them to do it.”

Liberman did not specify what kind of leverage he has, though if he were to remain steadfast in his refusal to join any government other than a unity government, it would be unlikely for Gantz or Netanyahu to be able to form a majority coalition.

In addition, Liberman said that he is not boycotting the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) parties, but they would have to be open to changes in matters of religion and state.

“We want to change the conversati­on,” Liberman said. “In matters of religion and state, there was serious harm to the status quo... We need to go back,” to the way things were before.

In addition, the Yisrael Beytenu leader said he will not support a Blue and White bill that would require a prime minister to quit if he is indicted.

Blue and White MK Zvi Hauser came out against the possibilit­y of a minority government supported by the Joint List at an event in Petah Tikva.

“Blue and White said before the election who we will sit with and form a government,” Hauser said. “Only a party that supports the basic, foundation­al arrangemen­t of the State of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state. Those are the relevant parties to a unity government. We plan to work to form a large, Zionist unity government. There is no relevance to a narrow, troublesom­e government.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? BENNY GANTZ
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) BENNY GANTZ
 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? AVIGDOR LIBERMAN
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) AVIGDOR LIBERMAN

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