The Jerusalem Post

Yamina, ultra-Orthodox pledge never to join Gantz gov’t

Joint vow designed to ward off threat of Blue and White leader’s hope to persuade them to join his coalition

- By JEREMY SHARON

Members of Knesset belonging to the right-wing religious and ultra-Orthodox parties have pledged not to join a government led by Blue and White leader MK Benny Gantz, either at the beginning or during the course of his coalition-forming process.

Although he is yet to be tasked by the president, Gantz is currently trying to formulate a minority government comprising his party, Labor-Meretz-Gesher and Yisrael Beytenu, and to possibly seek the support of the Joint List of Arab parties to support it externally without joining the coalition.

The purpose of such a government would be to oust Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from the premiershi­p in the hope that once this is achieved, some of the religious-Zionist and ultra-Orthodox parties might join and form a more stable coalition.

Those parties have now declared that they will not join such a government even after Netanyahu would no longer be prime minister.

“We MKs will not join, now nor in the future, a dangerous minority government headed by Benny Gantz, and will work with all our power to topple such a government and to establish a government headed by Benjamin Netanyahu which will protect Israel’s security and the Jewish and democratic character of the state,” reads the text of a letter jointly signed individual­ly by the Yamina and Shas MKs.

United Torah Judaism’s MKs did not individual­ly sign the letter, but party leaders MKs Yaakov Litzman and Moshe Gafni issued a statement to the press in the name of UTJ using the same wording as the letter signed by Yamina and Shas.

The parties also declared their opposition to any legislatio­n passed by the Blue and White-led bloc that would prohibit an MK from forming a government while on trial.

Blue and White, as well as the Joint List, is preparing such legislatio­n which would prevent Netanyahu from forming and heading a government since he is set to go on trial next week on corruption charges, barring the postponeme­nt he has requested.

 ?? (Flash90) ?? Yamina Party leaders celebrate at a rally after exit polls were announced on election night last week.
(Flash90) Yamina Party leaders celebrate at a rally after exit polls were announced on election night last week.

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