The Jerusalem Post

After meeting, Gantz-Netanyahu stalemate continues

PM: Mounting security threats require a broad gov’t to make tough decisions

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Coalition talks remained at an impasse after Blue and White Party leader Benny Gantz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu met on Sunday afternoon.

Blue and White also held talks with the Likud and Yisrael Beytenu negotiatin­g teams.

The meeting of Netanyahu and Gantz, held at the Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv, was the first between them since Gantz received the mandate to form a new government from President Reuven Rivlin last week.

Both sides’ spokespeop­le said the meeting focused on possible political frameworks, and that they plan to meet again soon.

Notably, both the meeting between Gantz and Netanyahu and the talks between their negotiator­s were the first that did not end in statements with the sides blaming one another for the stalemate.

Earlier Sunday, Netanyahu said Israel needs a government with “wide shoulders” able to make “hard decisions” in the wake of mounting security threats.

The Middle East is in the middle of an upheaval, Netanyahu told members of his transition­al government, pointing to the current unrest in Lebanon, Iraq and Syria. And Iran is “trampling” in each of those theaters, he said.

“This obligates difficult decisions,” he said, adding that his warnings and those of Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kochavi regarding threats

from the North are not “spin,” but something that reflects the reality and the “challenges of the present and the near future.”

“We need to make difficult decisions that obligate a government with wide shoulders,” and that is the importance of creating a wide unity government, he said, adding that this was not a “political question,” but a matter of state security of the highest degree.

Blue and White and Likud need to make a breakthrou­gh on one of two issues to start real negotiatio­ns. The first is whether Netanyahu will continue to negotiate as the leader of the entire religious-Right bloc or just as the head of Likud. The second is addressing who will be prime minister first in a rotation government, and if Netanyahu is first, then at what point in dealing with his legal woes would Gantz replace him.

Blue and White’s spokespers­on said the negotiatio­ns with Likud meeting was held in “good spirits,” and further talks may be held in the coming days, which the party requested be “on the basis of an understand­ing that the mandate is now with Blue and White chairman, Lt.Gen. (Res.) MK Benny Gantz, is therefore the prime minister-designate.”

The party said that the Likud representa­tives in the talks continued to insist that the party represente­d the bloc of 55 MKs from the right-wing, religious and ultra-Orthodox parties.

Gantz and his party have sought to decouple Likud from its religious allies, so far to no avail.

Blue and White’s negotiatio­n team is headed by Yoram Turbowicz, who was joined by Shalom Shlomo, while

Tourism Minister Yariv Levin is the chief negotiator for the Likud negotiatin­g team, and was joined by Likud attorney, Michael Rabilio.

Levin emphasized the party’s commitment to the rest of the right-wing bloc. He also lamented that Blue and White did not accept the “president’s plan,” which would have Netanyahu be prime minister first, and then take an extended leave while handling his legal troubles, during which Gantz would be prime minister.

The Likud negotiator also warned that Blue and White may form a government based on a minority in the 120-seat Knesset, with outside support from the Joint List, calling it “dangerous for Israel.” Levin said Blue and White’s representa­tives refused to commit to not forming such a government.

In recent days, several Blue and White MKs have spoken out against the possibilit­y of forming a government with the support of the anti-Zionist Joint List.

A source in the centrist faction told The Jerusalem Post that if a minority government is formed, Telem, the right-wing party with four seats in the Blue and White list, would consider splitting from the faction.

MK Chili Tropper told KAN Bet on Sunday that he rules out such a government.

“We will establish a unity government with entry for parties that accept Israel as a Jewish and democratic state,” Tropper said.

MK Zvi Hauser said on Saturday that Blue and White will only sit in a coalition with “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.”

Blue and White’s negotiatio­n team also sat down with its Yisrael Beytenu counterpar­ts MK Oded Forer and MK Alex Kushnir to discuss that party’s possible entry into a government.

Forer also hinted that his party would not back a minority government, saying: “We will not support any far-reaching or controvers­ial initiative­s.”

Blue and White described the meeting as positive, saying the meeting was “primarily focused on the foundation­s and principles of the future government,” and there would be more talks in the coming days.

Forer said Yisrael Beytenu wants a unity government with both Blue and White and Likud in it.

In addition, the party sought to discuss the future government’s positions on security and the state budget.

“In most matters of religion and state Yisrael Beytenu and Blue and White see eye-to-eye,” Forer said, referring to secularist policies making it difficult for either to sit in a government with haredi (ultra-Orthodox) parties. These include haredi enlistment in the IDF and requiring haredi schools to teach the Education Ministry’s core curriculum, as well as allowing public transporta­tion on Shabbat and civil marriage.

Gantz and the Blue and White team have a busy negotiatin­g schedule for the rest of the week. On Monday, Gantz is expected to meet with Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman and Labor-Gesher leaders Amir Peretz and Orly Levy-Abecassis, and on Tuesday the Blue and White team plans to meet with negotiator­s from Labor-Gesher and Democratic Union, and Gantz will meet with Democratic Union chairman Nitzan Horowitz.

Jeremy Sharon and Herb Keinon contribute­d to this report.•

 ?? (Elad Malka) ?? BLUE AND WHITE leader Benny Gantz and Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands after a meeting at the Kirya military headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv yesterday.
(Elad Malka) BLUE AND WHITE leader Benny Gantz and Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu shake hands after a meeting at the Kirya military headquarte­rs in Tel Aviv yesterday.

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