The Jerusalem Post

Do your job

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o shticks or tricks.”

That was the promise Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made to Benny Gantz – and the nation – in April during his frequent televised prime-time addresses about coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, in an attempt to get the Blue and White leader to join a national emergency government.

When Gantz finally acquiesced, Netanyahu doubled down on his aims, tweeting, “I promised the State of Israel a national emergency government that will act to save the lives and livelihood­s of the citizens of Israel. I will continue to do everything for you, citizens of Israel.”

It seems like since then, there’s been nothing but shticks and tricks, with the tenuous coalition always appearing to be coming apart at the seams. The latest developmen­t which threatened to derail the government was a bill brought to vote Wednesday to establish a parliament­ary commission of inquiry into judicial conflicts of interest.

Now, whether or not judges have conflicts of interest may be an issue worth investigat­ing – and is certainly worth further scrutiny following the series of exposés on the subject in May by Kalman Liebskind in The Jerusalem Post’s sister Hebrew language newspaper, Maariv.

But it has little to do with the critical issues the country is currently dealing with. However, its timing can’t help but be seen as being connected to Netanyahu’s trial for fraud, bribery and breach of trust – and as another campaign in the battle against the judiciary that the prime minister has been championin­g since his legal woes began.

The bill, initiated by Yamina MK Bezalel Smotrich and supported by the Likud, failed to pass – by a 54 to 43 margin. But it did succeed in opening the floodgates of poison that exist between the two main coalition partners – the Likud and Blue and White.

Blue and White called it a “declaratio­n of war on Israeli democracy,” with Gantz saying from self-quarantine: “Instead of taking care of the unemployed and the small business owners, the Likud wants to interrogat­e the judges... Someone who wants to harm democracy instead of saving lives is hurting Israel’s citizens, and I will not allow it.”

As Herb Keinon wrote in the Post on Wednesday, instead of focusing on the critical issues at hand of battling corona and formulatin­g a workable battle plan to get the economy back on its feet, the coalition is spending its time on bickering and disagreeme­nts.

Even when it does seem to focus on the coronaviru­s pandemic, there’s no sense of bodies working together for the common good, but factions pushing their agenda and vying for attention.

Take, for example, the financial plan the government is working on to bail the country out of perhaps the worst financial crisis since the establishm­ent of the state.

Likud MK Nir Barkat, Jerusalem’s previous mayor – and someone who seemingly knows his way around financial matters – presented a comprehens­ive economic plan this week to Netanyahu, saying it could save 500,000 jobs if adopted. Barkat’s plan consists of a bailout of NIS 28 billion to 250,000 businesses to prevent them from shutting down; a NIS 50b. incentive to encourage public consumptio­n and the purchase of Israeli-made goods; and a NIS 10b. grant to create new educationa­l programs that would help train unemployed people to pursue new career paths.

However, his party rival, Finance Minister Israel Katz, together with Netanyahu, are working on their own plan, which has still not been announced as of this writing. It is said to include the extension of unemployme­nt benefits until June 2021, a suspension of mortgage payments, business loans of NIS 23 billion and offering extra aid to people over the age of 67 who face unemployme­nt.

Wouldn’t it be more efficient and achieve speedier results if these members of the same party worked together on the urgently needed plan? The problem is that the refusal or inability to cooperate is becoming the overriding characteri­stic of the leaders who are tasked with safeguardi­ng the country and its citizens during this time of crisis.

With almost a million jobs lost – and the plight of many Israelis reaching a level of desperatio­n, as the country seems irreversib­ly headed toward more restrictio­ns that will prevent even more people from working – there is no room for rivalries, personal grudges or political considerat­ions. It’s time to end the shticks and the tricks.

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