The Jewish Chronicle

Netanyahu Will he go?

- Anshel Pfeffer is the JC’s Israel Correspond­ent ANSHEL PFEFFER

AS THE year draws to an end in Israel, there is only one issue on the agenda: Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s alleged corruption. When will the police finally wrap up its investigat­ion and will they, as expected, recommend he be indicted?

Looking back over 2017, it is hard to find anything else that has dominated news-cycles in Israel like the investigat­ions that began last year overshadow­ing the political sphere, with everyone waiting for the climactic moment that never arrived.

Boring years don’t exist in Israeli history, but 2017 was as close as you could get to one. It was a year without any truly dramatic or pivotal events, and just a lot of waiting around for unfinished business to get resolved.

Not only did an indictment against Mr Netanyahu not materialis­e, but his unhappy coalition remained surprising­ly intact. There were a few wobbles, such as when Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon fought with him over the launch of the new public broadcasti­ng corporatio­n, and sparring between Likud and Strictly Orthodox ministers over infrastruc­ture work on Shabbat. In both cases, compromise­s were found.

Elsewhere in politics, most of the controvers­ial laws pushed by the government — such as one designed to silence police investigat­ions of politician­s — were eventually abandoned or postponed. The Labour Party yet again replaced its leader, but newcomer Avi Gabbay languishes in the polls, just like his predecesso­r Isaac Herzog.

It was a status-quo year, too, in Israel’s relations with its neighbours. Tension with the Palestinia­ns simmered but, with the exception of two very brief outbreaks of violence in July and December, things held.

The same holds for the tense borders with Gaza, Lebanon and Syria. Occasional­ly, a rocket or mortar bomb fell on the Israeli side; Israel responded with air-strikes and mysterious targets were bombed in the night deep within Syria. But these were the same cycles of previous years, not an escalation, and the question-marks over the future of Gaza and post-war Syria still loom unresolved. More unfinished business for next year.

On the foreign policy front, there was a lot of coming and going, with dozens of heads of state visiting Israel, including the first visit by an Indian prime minister. Mr Netanyahu himself spent nearly two months on trips abroad, but did not change much — as last week’s UN vote against the US recognitio­n of Jerusalem showed.

One important relationsh­ip for Israel did suffer: the one with the Jewish diaspora, as progressiv­e American Jews in particular raged at Mr Netanyahu for an overlywarm friendship with President Trump and for ditching the West- ern Wall prayer-space agreement.

The economy was a mixed bag as well. The main indices remained favourable, but there was no easing the burden on working- and middle-class families. Consumer prices and, crucially, house prices remained high. The biggest economic event of the year, the purchase of technology company Mobileye by Intel for nearly $16 billion (£12 billion) was offset when medicine-maker Teva, Israel’s biggest private corporatio­n, prepared to close down factories and lay off thousands of workers.

It was a year for significan­t anniversar­ies: 50 years since the Six-Day war, a century since the Balfour Declaratio­n (although that was a much bigger event in London than in Jerusalem), and 120 years since the first Zionist Congress.

Now Israel is kicking off the year of its 70th anniversar­y, but will Mr Netanyahu still be around in April to lead the celebratio­ns?

Consumer and house prices stayed high

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 ?? PHOTO: FLASH 90 ?? Benjamin Netanyahu: How long can he last?
PHOTO: FLASH 90 Benjamin Netanyahu: How long can he last?

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