Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu government on the brink

Another right-wing minister calls for early elections to protest Israel’s Gaza policy.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y Tarnopolsk­y is a special correspond­ent.

JERUSALEM — The Israeli government teetered on the verge of collapse Friday after a second key rightwing minister called for early elections in protest of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the longrunnin­g crisis with Hamas, the Islamist militia that governs the Gaza Strip.

Education Minister Naftali Bennett echoed Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman’s demand two days earlier, made when he resigned to protest a cease-fire with Hamas. With Netanyahu’s parliament­ary majority down to a single vote, there are few signs that the disarray in his coalition will resolve itself.

After meeting with Netanyahu on Friday, the first day of the Israeli weekend, Bennett stopped short of resigning but said that the only way forward is “to go to elections as soon as possible with no possibilit­y of continuing the current government.”

Bennett had demanded the coveted ministry from which Lieberman resigned, saying he would abandon the government if he were denied the post.

But people close to the prime minister have said he intends to take on the responsibi­lities himself. He was left with little choice after one of the few Cabinet moderates, Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon, told Netanyahu that he would withdraw from the government if Bennett were awarded the defense portfolio.

While Bennett declared that the date for a snap election would be decided Sunday, Netanyahu raced to hold a series of last-ditch calls with his remaining ministers, contending, according to a statement from his office, that “there is no reason to go to elections” and that he would make “every effort to preserve the rightwing government.”

Even if successful, Netanyahu appeared to be postponing the inevitable.

The departure of Yisrael Beiteinu, Lieberman’s hardline nationalis­t party, and Jewish Home, Bennett’s hard-line pro-settlement party, leave Netanyahu exposed to increasing­ly loud complaints that he has lost the claim to his longtime nickname, “Mr. Security.”

Friday’s political tumult concluded a week that began with a botched Israeli army special operations raid into Gaza that prompted Netanyahu to quickly return to Israel from a summit meeting in Paris.

The operation, which resulted in the death of a senior Israeli military officer, sparked a two-day military confrontat­ion between Israel and Hamas that ended with an inconclusi­ve truce that has proved to be massively unpopular among Israelis.

The notion that Netanyahu capitulate­d to terrorism by agreeing to the cease-fire, as Lieberman accused in his harsh resignatio­n announceme­nt, has been echoed in growing public protests.

Residents of Israel’s south, notably from Sderot, a city that has long been a bastion of Netanyahu’s conservati­ve Likud party, have burned tires and blocked major highways to protest a “humiliatin­g” deal they believe has not materially improved their exposure to Hamas rockets and missiles that have been launched from Gaza at their communitie­s for years.

The political and social revolt could not have erupted at a more challengin­g time for Netanyahu, who faces a likely indictment resulting from three criminal investigat­ions in which police have recommende­d he be charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

Netanyahu has denied any wrongdoing, blaming the criminal inquiries on a left-wing conspiracy.

On Friday, Netanyahu described the endurance of his government in stark, existentia­l terms, pleading with his Cabinet ministers “not to repeat the historical mistake of 1992 when the right-wing government was toppled, the left came into power and brought the Oslo disaster to the state of Israel,” an allusion to the 1993 Oslo peace accords with the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on.

But after Kahlon told Netanyahu he would quit the government if Bennett were chosen to lead the Defense Ministry, the prime minister was left with nowhere to turn for support.

In an interview with Israeli television, Hanan Kristal, a political analyst, dismissed the prime minister’s warnings about the grim outcome that would follow “overthrowi­ng a right-wing government” as “only a Netanyahu gimmick.”

“It’s every man for himself now,” Kristal said.

Predicting elections will come in March, Kristal said, “Netanyahu wants to push the date back as far as possible and run as a full-time prime minister, not some lame duck.”

Most Israeli observers believe negotiatio­ns over the date for elections, currently scheduled for November 2019, will begin in earnest Sunday.

Recent municipal elections, in which several longterm mayors were overthrown, augur a tumultuous electoral campaign ahead.

“Israelis want change and are going to vote for change,” political analyst Ronit Vered predicted Friday, despite relatively cheery snap polls that showed a comfortabl­e cushion of support for Netanyahu.

“The issue in the coming election will be democracy and clean government,” she said.

 ?? Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images ?? ISRAELI Education Minister Naftali Bennett, while echoing a call for early elections, threatened to join Avigdor Lieberman in quitting the government unless he is named defense minister, the post Lieberman left.
Thomas Coex AFP/Getty Images ISRAELI Education Minister Naftali Bennett, while echoing a call for early elections, threatened to join Avigdor Lieberman in quitting the government unless he is named defense minister, the post Lieberman left.

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