Dayton Daily News

Israel’s Netanyahu tries to fend off party rival

- By Joseph Krauss Associated Press writers Tia Goldenberg and Patty Nieberg contribute­d to this report.

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday faced the first serious internal challenge to his decade-long rule as his party held a primary vote following his failure to form a government and his indictment on corruption charges.

Veteran Likud party member Gideon Saar hoped to unseat Netanyahu, telling voters he would be better placed to form a government after national elections in March.

Despite the indictment, Netanyahu remains popular among Likud members, and the fiercely loyal party — which has only had four leaders since its inception in the 1970s — stood firmly behind the long-serving leader. He was expected to defeat Saar, and a win could strengthen his hand going into the next national vote.

“For years, I have been working for you for the sake of our beloved country. Now I am asking for your support,” Netanyahu wrote on Facebook. “A big victory for me in the primaries will ensure a huge victory in the Knesset elections.”

Saar, who has garnered support from a handful of Likud backbenche­rs, had surged in the lead-up to the vote, and he could benefit from stormy weather that appeared to be keeping turnout low. If he wins, he would become Likud’s candidate for prime minister in March.

“We can win today, to set forth on a new path that will allow us to form a strong and stable government, that will allow us to unite the people of Israel, which is probably the most important thing right now,” Saar told reporters.

The results are expected early today. Israeli media reported at 6 p.m. that 28.6% of the party’s 116,000 eligible voters had cast ballots.

Netanyahu has portrayed Saar as inexperien­ced, while depicting himself as a master of internatio­nal diplomacy and a scourge to Israel’s enemies.

In what was seen as an embarrassm­ent at a critical moment, Netanyahu was rushed off stage Wednesday after a rocket fired from Gaza set off an air raid siren at a campaign rally in the southern city of Ashkelon. Israel responded with a wave of airstrikes early Thursday. There were no reports of casualties or major damage.

A similar incident happened in September, when Netanyahu was in the nearby city of Ashdod campaignin­g for the second general Israeli election of the year.

Netanyahu faces charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three corruption cases. He is accused of trading legislativ­e or regulatory favors for lavish gifts or favorable media coverage. He denies wrongdoing and has waged an angry campaign against the media and law enforcemen­t officials he says are bent on ousting him. His supporters have tried to paint Saar as part of the same conspiracy.

The indictment­s came amid months of political deadlock in Israel after two inconclusi­ve elections.

Netanyahu’s main rival, former military chief Benny Gantz, was also unable to form a government after the September vote. While the two professed eagerness to form a unity government, they differed on its compositio­n and who would lead it, deepening the stalemate.

Recent polls showed that with Saar as leader, Likud would make a more powerful bloc with its natural ultra-Orthodox and nationalis­t allies. Saar would also be in an easier position to create a national unity government with Gantz’s centrist Blue and White party if, as expected, the March election produces a deadlock.

Speaking on television, Saar said he was best positioned to lead Likud to victory. He described Blue and White as a “balloon” comprised of various factions unified by the sole goal of toppling Netanyahu. If Netanyahu goes, he said, a good chunk of Blue and White’s supporters would return to Likud. “If I win today, we will also win on March 2,” he said.

Whatever the results are, said Avraham Diskin, a political scientist at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the primary “definitely strengthen­s Saar unless he is humiliated in the elections today, and that’s not very likely to happen.”

Netanyahu hopes that the coming election will deliver him a majority of lawmakers in favor of granting him immunity from prosecutio­n. But if Saar leads the party into the new election, Netanyahu would lose that option.

Even if Netanyahu wins the primary, his political future would remain in doubt. The Supreme Court is set next week to begin considerin­g the question of whether an indicted member of parliament can be tasked with forming a new government. It’s not clear when a ruling would be handed down.

In recent days, Netanyahu has appeared rejuvenate­d, holding campaign events in which he has met with Likud members face to face, often in small gatherings.

Netanyahu has trumpeted his close ties to U.S. President Donald Trump, Russian President Vladimir Putin and other world leaders. He has also presented himself as the best candidate to protect Israel, pointing to a wave of recent military operations against Iran-linked targets across the region.

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Israel’s governing Likud party was holding primaries on Thursday, in the first serious internal challenge to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in his more than a decade in power.
ARIEL SCHALIT / ASSOCIATED PRESS Israel’s governing Likud party was holding primaries on Thursday, in the first serious internal challenge to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in his more than a decade in power.

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