The Jerusalem Post

Lapid: Yesh Atid ready to lead nation

On Bennett, Sa’ar: It is wrong to sit in television studios as people are dying

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Opposition leader Yair Lapid would be honored to be prime minister of Israel after the March 23 election, he said for the first time in an interview Monday night with Jerusalem Post editor-in-chief Yaakov Katz sponsored by the Tel Aviv Internatio­nal Salon.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has referred to Lapid as his opponent in the race for prime minister throughout the campaign. Lapid continued to sidestep whether he is running against Netanyahu for the premiershi­p.

“I think it’s time for a generation­al change in Israel,” Lapid said. “I am ready. The party is ready. We have the right plans, the right abilities and experience. I served in various positions that prepare you. If I had the chance, of course I would be more than honored to serve my country this way.”

Lapid said he and his Yesh Atid Party’s candidates are more than capable of taking the reins next week, but the election was not about the fight between Netanyahu and himself.

“Netanyahu is trying to drag me into a fist fight about who will be prime minister,” Lapid said. “He is doing this because he wants to make sure Israelis don’t understand the more important issue of what government we will have. The

only government he has to offer is with [United Torah Judaism’s Ya’acov] Litzman and [Religious Zionist Party candidate Itamar] Ben-Gvir, homophobic and racist people. He doesn’t want to talk about it. I am not willing to give him this. This is why I am toning down this.”

Lapid criticized prime ministeria­l candidates Naftali Bennett and Gideon Sa’ar for openly campaignin­g for the post during the COVID-19 pandemic.

“I do not claim to not have personal ambitions,” he said. “It is wrong to sit in TV studios and describe your magnificen­t qualities to be prime minister when people are

unemployed and dying. You need to rise to the moment.”

While Lapid credited Netanyahu with bringing Israel vaccines, he downplayed the achievemen­t, saying: “Netanyahu is good at short-term projects. He is not a good manager.”

Regarding the Palestinia­n issue, he said he is “willing to recognize a Palestinia­n state, but not give them everything they want.”

There would be no right of return for Palestinia­n refugees, Israel must remain the most powerful country in the Middle East, and the Palestinia­n state would have to be demilitari­zed, he said.

Regarding Iran, Lapid said he was against the agreement reached by US president Barack Obama’s administra­tion, despite repeated claims by Netanyahu that he had supported it.

“He is lying, and he knows he’s lying, because we worked together against it,” Lapid said. “His lying on this hurts Israel’s security.”

If elected, he would have real dialogue with the Biden administra­tion on Iran, Lapid said. He criticized Netanyahu’s speech in Congress against the Iran deal, calling it “a huge mistake” and “irresponsi­ble.”

“We were nowhere near the table when decisions were made, because they were angry,” he said. “We have angry Democrats with long memories.”

When Donald Trump was US president, Netanyahu “affiliated himself completely with a certain stream of the Republican Party,” Lapid said.

On matters of religion and state, he called for freedom of religion and civil marriage.

Lapid joked about the challenges of his shift from journalism to politics nearly a decade ago.

“I am making a quarter of what I made before and working at least three times as hard, but at least everybody hates me,” he joked. •

the right-wing Besheva weekly newspaper in Jerusalem, Bennett responded to Netanyahu’s attempts to take votes away from Yamina and his daring him to pledge allegiance to the Right.

“This is the same Netanyahu who promised before elections to remove [the illegal Bedouin encampment] Khan al-Ahmar, and now it’s a small city,” he said. “This is the same Netanyahu who promised ahead of election after election to apply sovereignt­y in Judea and Samaria.”

A promise from Netanyahu is just as trustworth­y as a driver clicking on Waze, “I am not driving,” Bennett said mockingly.

Netanyahu also promised ahead of multiple elections to form right-wing government­s and then preferred Labor under Ehud Barak to the right-wing National Union Party, he said, adding that after the last election, he formed a government with Blue and White leader Benny Gantz without Yamina.

“He promised Gantz that there would be no tricks and shticks and then violated the deal before he even finished his sentence,” Bennett said. “Those who appoint Tzipi Livni as justice minister are not right-wingers. They are just talkers.”

Meretz leader Nitzan Horowitz said his party would not join a government led by Bennett. Speaking at The Jerusalem Post Group conference, he said he was confident that if Netanyahu is ousted, the Biden administra­tion would work together with Israel’s new prime minister and achieve a peace agreement between Israel and the Palestinia­ns. •

 ?? YAIR LAPID ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)
YAIR LAPID (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

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