The Jerusalem Post

Lapid okay letting Bennett lead in rotation

Netanyahu in plea to Yamina, New Hope heads: Come back to your natural home

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Yesh Atid chairman Yair Lapid is willing to reach an agreement with Yamina leader Naftali Bennett that would enable Bennett to go first in a rotation in the Prime Minister’s Office, sources in Lapid’s party said on Wednesday.

The sources said Lapid is willing to make such an offer, even though Yesh Atid won 17 seats in the March 23 election and Yamina won only seven. But Bennett has rejected invitation­s to meet with Lapid, despite mediation by New Hope leader Gideon Sa’ar.

Yesh Atid officials said that as part of such an agreement, Bennett would have to publicly rule out using the mandate to build a coalition with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and the Likud’s satellite parties and announce that he would break his campaign promises to not sit in a coalition with Meretz and a coalition backed by Arab parties.

Netanyahu called on his former political allies, Bennett and Sa’ar, to set aside their past disputes and join a government led by him, in a statement to the public on Wednesday night. Netanyahu said the public gave a majority to parties on the Right and a stable government can be formed.

“The nation decided that we must sit together,” Netanyahu told Bennett and Sa’ar, in his first public statement since the election. “Come home to your natural home on the Right.”

Netanyahu warned that any other government would be left-wing, unstable and would not last. He stopped short of offering Bennett a rotation in the Prime Minister’s Office, but sources close to him said Bennett and Sa’ar would be welcomed in the Likud.

Sa’ar responded that it was wrong of Netanyahu to reach out to him on the same day that he and his allies spread conspiracy theories about him and President Reuven Rivlin. He was referring to reports that Netanyahu had told Likud ministers that Rivlin would grant the mandate to form the government to Bennett as part of a plot by Rivlin and Sa’ar.

“I will keep my promises to the voters,” Sa’ar wrote on Twitter. “I will not join, nor will I support a government led by Netanyahu. The continuati­on of the rule of Netanyahu, who prefers his personal good to that of the state, harms Israel.”

Sa’ar said a government led by another Likud figure could be formed easily and quickly. He singled out Health Minister Yuli Edelstein, Finance Minister Israel Katz and MK and former Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat.

Bennett also appeared to reject Netanyahu’s offer.

“Naftali Bennett is concerned about the citizens of Israel, not reserved slots,” his Yamina Party said in a statement to the press. “Bennett will continue making every effort to form a good and stable government that will save Israel from the chaos.”

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz said at a press conference at Ramat Gan’s Kfar Maccabiah hotel and convention center on Wednesday that Netanyahu must be replaced, and it does not matter by whom.

Gantz spoke ahead of the end of his three-month term as acting justice minister. He lamented that because Netanyahu will not bring the appointmen­t to a vote, there will be no justice minister as Netanyahu’s criminal trial resumes.

“This is a wake-up call to all the honest people in politics,”

Gantz said. “It is a time of emergency, so it is less important who will be prime minister, as long as Netanyahu stops serving in his post and we will agree on an honest and statesmanl­ike government that will serve all the citizens.”

Gantz said getting parties from the Center to the Right to join the effort to replace Netanyahu is complicate­d, a reference to Bennett. He said the effort would require more talks to find a solution enabling the formation of a new government.

Regarding Lapid, Gantz would only say that Blue and White will support the candidate who will have the best chance of replacing the government.

Gantz met on Wednesday with Lapid in the second meeting of the former allies turned rivals in five days, after not meeting for more than a year.

“The two continued discussion­s on the solution for forming a government that will replace Netanyahu,” a spokesman for Lapid said. “The discussion­s will continue in the coming days.”

Lapid is set to meet on Thursday with Joint List leaders Ayman Odeh and Ahmad Tibi but not with the third head of the list, Balad Party head Sami Abou Shahadeh. Odeh and Tibi are said to be willing to endorse Lapid if he agrees to their demands.

Balad announced on Wednesday that its governing council has decided not to recommend to Rivlin that any candidate receive the mandate to form the government.

Haskel defended her party leader, writing Levi “Mickey: This was your election promise. Even when you had 36 mandates, you did not succeed in forming a government. If you don’t concede now, you know an irreversib­le situation could arise.”

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz has had to deny sending a representa­tive to tell kingmaker Mansour Abbas not to endorse Lapid. Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman denied a report he is vetoing Bennett.

With all this talk in the self-declared “change camp,” Netanyahu is undoubtedl­y listening in delight, while he remains silent.

 ?? (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) ?? PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN and Supreme Court Justice Uzi Vogelman enter the ceremony at the President’s Residence yesterday for the results of last month’s election. Likud ministers castigated Rivlin after he called for ‘unconventi­onal alliances’ at the event. See story, Page 2.
(Yonatan Sindel/Flash90) PRESIDENT REUVEN RIVLIN and Supreme Court Justice Uzi Vogelman enter the ceremony at the President’s Residence yesterday for the results of last month’s election. Likud ministers castigated Rivlin after he called for ‘unconventi­onal alliances’ at the event. See story, Page 2.

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