Chattanooga Times Free Press

Israeli parliament takes step toward new elections

- BY ILAN BEN ZION

JERUSALEM — Israel took a major step toward plunging into its fourth national election in under two years on Wednesday as lawmakers — supported by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s main coalition partner — passed a preliminar­y proposal to dissolve parliament.

The 61- 54 vote came just seven months after the coalition took office following three inconclusi­ve elections in just over a year. Netanyahu’s Likud party and Defense Minister Benny Gantz’s Blue and White said they were seeking national unity to confront the coronaviru­s crisis. But since then, the rivals have been locked in infighting.

The vote gave only preliminar­y approval to ending the alliance and forcing a new election early next year. The legislatio­n now heads to a committee before parliament as a whole takes up final approval, perhaps as soon as next week. In the meantime, Gantz and Netanyahu are expected to continue negotiatio­ns in a last-ditch attempt to preserve their troubled alliance.

By joining the opposition in Wednesday’s vote, Gantz’s party voiced its dissatisfa­ction with Netanyahu, accusing him of putting his own personal interests ahead of those of the country.

Netanyahu is on trial for a series of corruption charges, and Gantz accuses the prime minister of hindering key government­al work, including the passage of a national budget, in hopes of stalling or overturnin­g the legal proceeding­s against him. Gantz and other critics believe Netanyahu is ultimately hoping to see a friendlier parliament elected next year that will give him immunity from prosecutio­n.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid, whose Yesh Atid party sponsored the bill to trigger new elections, accused the government of gross mishandlin­g of the coronaviru­s crisis and its economic fallout. He said the one thing all citizens share is “the feeling that they lost control over their lives.”

The government still has not yet passed a budget for 2020.

 ?? YONATAN SINDEL/ POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a statement to his Likud party in Jerusalem on Wednesday.
YONATAN SINDEL/ POOL PHOTO VIA AP Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu delivers a statement to his Likud party in Jerusalem on Wednesday.

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