Weekend Herald

Netanyahu plays his Trump card

The Israeli PM is counting on the US President’s popularity among voters to help him get re-elected, writes Aron Heller

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Seeking re-election under a cloud of criminal investigat­ions, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looks to be channellin­g his inner Donald Trump in an angry campaign against perceived domestic enemies.

Drawing clear inspiratio­n from Trump, Netanyahu’s Likud party has plastered huge billboards of the two leaders together and launched a Trump-like weekly webcast to counter what it calls the “fake news” industry.

The campaign reflects Trump’s popularity in Israel, one of the few countries where an alliance with the American President is considered a political asset. But it also risks underminin­g the traditiona­l bipartisan support for Israel among Americans.

Despite his troubles at home, Trump has earned the appreciati­on of most Israelis by recognisin­g Jerusalem as their capital and moving the US Embassy there. Trump has further impressed Israelis by backing out of the internatio­nal nuclear deal with Iran, reimposing stiff sanctions on the Islamic Republic and vigorously defending Israel in internatio­nal forums.

“This Administra­tion, not just Trump, has been the friendlies­t administra­tion to Israel since 1948,” said Michael Oren, a deputy minister and former ambassador to Washington. “Netanyahu is just tapping into these current global trends of people living in a world of uncertaint­y who want strong, sometimes brutally strong, leaders.”

Netanyahu and Trump enjoy a strong personal rapport. Netanyahu also seems to relish the American President’s attitude toward the Middle East, not only on Iran but also his hands-off approach to the Palestinia­n issue and Israeli settlement constructi­on.

After an icy eight-year relationsh­ip with Barack Obama, Netanyahu has gone out of his way to praise Trump at every turn.

He also has held his tongue on Trump’s various scandals, even after a neo-Nazi march in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, when Trump appeared to defend the actions of white supremacis­ts. On a visit to Washington, Netanyahu even implored critics to stop questionin­g Trump over the supposed antiSemiti­sm of some of his supporters.

While Trump’s isolationi­sm, particular­ly his planned pullout from Syria, may not be good for Israel, his unabashed pro-Israel rhetoric has made him popular domestical­ly, said Nahum Barnea, one of Israel’s most influentia­l columnists.

Beyond a confluence of interests, Trump and Netanyahu seem to share a populist streak against their countries’ more liberal establishm­ents — to the delight of their nationalis­t bases.

Netanyahu has responded to a series of corruption investigat­ions with Trump-like attacks on Israeli media, law-enforcemen­t, judiciary and other “elites” he believes are bent on his removal. He is quick to deride any critic as a “leftist”, and, like Trump, has taken to social media to whip up his base.

“Netanyahu is a person who knows how to learn and imitate others and he’s been doing it in the past two to three years since Trump rose to power,” said Barnea. “He’s been far harsher in his domestic expression­s and he knows that you create a political victory by pitting one sector against another.”

Trump, who endorsed Netanyahu in a fawning pre-Israeli election clip in 2013 — before he got into politics — appears to equally admire the Israeli leader. On Instagram, Trump shared an image of the giant billboard over the Ayalon highway in Tel Aviv featuring the two smiling and shaking hands under the slogan “Netanyahu. In a different league”.

More significan­tly, he is expected to visit Washington shortly before the April 9 election in Israel.

In response to the billboard ads, Valerie O’Brien, spokeswoma­n for the US Embassy in Israel, clarified that the US was “not involved in Likud’s campaign messages or strategy”. While it may be beneficial in the shortterm, some warn the tight alignment with Trump could have negative longterm implicatio­ns.

Israel, once a source of solid bipartisan support, has become an increasing­ly divisive issue among Americans in recent years. A poll conducted by the Pew Research Centre last year, for instance, found Republican­s more sympatheti­c to Israel than Democrats by a nearly 3-to-1 margin. Some fear an eventual backlash from Democrats.

“The more that Democrats don’t like Trump, the more . . . he associates himself with, in this case Netanyahu, gets drawn into that equation,” said Ron Klein, a former

Netanyahu is a person who knows how to learn and imitate others and he’s been doing it in the past two to three years since Trump rose to power. Nahum Barnea

congressma­n who now chairs the Jewish Democratic Council of America.

“For those of us who are proIsrael, that’s unhealthy.”

Netanyahu is not alone in tapping into Trump’s appeal.

Likud backbenche­r Oren Hazan recently said the highlight of his term was the selfie he took with Trump during a 2017 visit. Even Netanyahu’s top challenger, former military chief Benny Gantz, chose a campaign slogan — “Israel Before Everything” — that many viewed as echoing Trump’s “America First”.

But only Netanyahu has moulded his politics in Trump’s image.

He has long had a rocky relationsh­ip with the media and accuses it, along with police and prosecutor­s, of being part of a “leftist” witch hunt to force him from office. Like Trump, he has also gone after former allies, floating conspiracy theories about an alleged planned putsch by a Likud rival.

The Prime Minister appears to be modelling his recent launch of Likud TV on Trump’s Real News Update ,a weekly webcast on Facebook hosted by the President’s daughter-in-law to counterbal­ance what the Administra­tion deems a hostile media. Netanyahu’s first clip made dismissive references about police investigat­ions into alleged corruption by the Prime Minister.

Police have recommende­d indicting Netanyahu on three corruption cases, and Israel’s attorney general is expected to announce his decision whether to charge him before the elections.

Back in 2009, it was Obama who offered inspiratio­n to Israeli campaigner­s. An ultra-Orthodox Jewish party translated “yes we can” into its campaign slogan and Netanyahu designed his webpage after Obama’s. But a decade later, Trump is the hot commodity.

“It’s part of the Americanis­ation of our politics. The difference is that Israeli campaigns stole tactics from Obama but still maintained a certain distance from him,” said Barnea. “Trump is considered one of us.”

 ?? Photos / AP, Washington Post ?? Benjamin Netanyahu has been welcomed to the White House by Donald Trump (inset) and is hoping their relationsh­ip will win over voters.
Photos / AP, Washington Post Benjamin Netanyahu has been welcomed to the White House by Donald Trump (inset) and is hoping their relationsh­ip will win over voters.

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