Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu trails in early tally

Israel’s prime minister is fighting to keep his job — and avoid criminal charges.

- By Noga Tarnopolsk­y and Laura King Special correspond­ent Tarnopolsk­y reported from Tel Aviv and Times staff writer King from Washington.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pointedly refrained from claiming victory in the Israeli election as he greeted supporters early Wednesday. Challenger Benny Gantz holds a narrow lead in exit polls and early returns.

TEL AVIV — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, fighting for his political life, appeared to falter early Wednesday in his quest for a new term in office, with exit polls and early ballot-counting giving an edge to his main rival, former military chief Benny Gantz. In a wee-hours appearance, a somber Netanyahu pointedly refrained from claiming victory.

After a bruising and divisive campaign, Gantz’s centrist Blue and White party appeared to have won one or two more parliament­ary seats than Netanyahu’s Likud. But the prime minister urged backers to wait for the complete tally.

“We are still waiting for the final results, but one thing is clear: The state of Israel is at a historical point of time,” Netanyahu said to scattered cheers at his party’s headquarte­rs.

It was after 3 a.m. when the prime minister appeared onstage, sounding hoarse and looking fatigued. He called the campaign “most difficult … difficult is not quite the word.”

Instead of a victory claim, Netanyahu hailed his own achievemen­ts, railed against the “very slanted” media, and slammed the Arab-majority party that appeared to have surged in the vote.

Gantz, speaking to his own supporters, also urged awaiting final results, but — sounding like the military man he was for so long — said Netanyahu had “failed in his mission.”

“This is the start of a journey to repair Israeli society,” he said.

Counting votes is a laborious process in Israel. There is no electronic voting, and paper ballots are counted by hand, one by one, with observers of each political party observing. The final count is unlikely to be certified for several days.

But it was clear that no party garnered a majority in the 120-seat Knesset, meaning the winning party will have to find allies in order to form a coalition.

Early tallies suggested that Netanyahu’s allyturned-rival Avigdor Lieberman had strengthen­ed his party’s hand, positionin­g him as a kingmaker in coming coalition negotiatio­ns. And a faction mainly representi­ng Arab citizens of Israel appeared on track to become the third-largest party, drawing an infuriated admonition from Netanyahu not to empower it by bringing it into a governing coalition.

“It is not possible to have a government dependent on Arab parties who support terror and don’t support the existence of Israel as a Jewish state,” he said. “The order of the hour is to prevent the establishm­ent of an antiZionis­t government.”

Netanyahu, 69, has more at stake than extending his run as the country’s longestser­ving prime minister. Victory could give him the means to fend off likely criminal corruption charges. The prime minister franticall­y campaigned throughout the day of voting, at times in defiance of election rules, taking to social media and even hefting a bullhorn in Jerusalem’s central bus station.

A loss for Netanyahu would amount to a political earthquake in Israel. A consummate political survivor, the prime minister is nicknamed “the magician,” in part for his ability to stage miraculous escapes from difficult situations. But the exit polls and preliminar­y results were sobering.

“The results don’t look good right now, but we hope they will improve as the actual votes are counted,” Yoav Kish, a Likud member of the Knesset, said after seeing the early tallies.

At the campaign headquarte­rs of Likud, the atmosphere darkened in the early morning hours as initial ballot counts pointed to gains by Blue and White and its prospectiv­e coalition partners. Before a sparse audience, a reel of Netanyahu media appearance­s played on a big screen.

It was the second national election in five months. In April, Likud beat Blue and White by the slightest of margins, but Netanyahu failed to recruit enough allies to form a coalition. Tuesday’s turnout of nearly 70% was about 2.5% higher than in the last balloting, which saw historical­ly low numbers of voters.

Coalition politickin­g will be the key thing to watch after the votes are counted. It’s even possible that Likud and Blue and White, despite their difference­s, would agree to join forces in a “unity” government — although Gantz says he will not sit in government with the prime minister if he is indicted, and Likud is unlikely to jettison Netanyahu as its leader.

Or there could be another stalemate, which could conceivabl­y lead to yet another national vote, probably early next year.

Netanyahu has been shadowed by separate but intertwine­d long-running scandals, and the attorney general has recommende­d criminal charges in three of them. He faces accusation­s of accepting expensive gifts for political favors, ordering government action aimed at hurting a newspaper in exchange for favorable coverage from a competitor, and helping a friend receive regulatory concession­s for his telecommun­ications company.

The prime minister denies all the allegation­s against him.

With an indictment expected pending a hearing in two weeks, some hard-line and ultra-religious potential coalition partners are willing to support measures that would grant Netanyahu immunity from prosecutio­n while in office. But that would all but rule out an alliance with the secular Lieberman. At least one of those prospectiv­e partners ended up not getting enough votes to make it into the Knesset.

Even if he were asked by President Reuven Rivlin to try to form a coalition, Netanyahu — who has been prime minister for the last decade and also served for several years during the 1990s — would again face difficult arithmetic. Rivlin is to consult with all the party leaders in the next few days.

A complicati­ng factor for the prime minister is Lieberman, whose party, Yisrael Beiteinu — Israel Is Our Home — appeared to emerge as among the night’s big winners.

Lieberman refused after the April vote to enter into a coalition with Netanyahu unless the prime minister agreed to a new military draft law for ultra-Orthodox Jewish seminarian­s. Their exemptions are a sore point with many secular Israelis.

Speaking to cheering backers in Jerusalem, Lieberman expressed hopes for a “unity government with Gantz and Likud.”

In the weeks, days and hours leading up to the election, as well as on voting day, the prime minister stayed with his usual political playbook and took dramatic steps to appeal to Israel’s far right. Last week he pledged to annex the Jordan Valley, which makes up a large part of the West Bank.

Seizing so much Palestinia­n territory would probably be a death knell for the so-called two-state solution, which calls for Israel and a Palestinia­n state to exist side by side.

But for many Israeli voters, bread-and-butter domestic issues are far more important.

Netanyahu, as in the past, has also been criticized for harsh anti-Arab rhetoric leading up to the vote, which might have helped to galvanize the Israeli citizens of Palestinia­n descent who make up about a fifth of the electorate.

The principal Arab-majority party, the Joint List, performed strongly, according to exit polls, possibly doubling its seats.

The Arab faction’s gains threaten Netanyahu, whose tenure those parliament­arians would like to end. With the Joint List projected to become the third-largest party in parliament, Netanyahu’s furious attacks on Arab politician­s may have backfired. The faction’s leader, Ayman Odeh, told Israel’s Channel 13 that “there’s a heavy price to pay for incitement.”

Like his ally President Trump, Netanyahu has targeted the news media in the election run-up and launched stinging personal attacks on political foes, as well as law enforcemen­t and the judiciary.

He has sought to depict himself as a master statesman, continuall­y touting his warm relationsh­ip with Trump but also reaching out to leaders like Russian President Vladimir Putin, with whom he met last week. As Tuesday’s vote was going on, Russia announced Putin would visit Israel in January.

Before the April vote, Trump moved to bolster Netanyahu’s prospects, recognizin­g Israeli sovereignt­y over the disputed Golan Heights, which Israel captured from Syria in 1967. But the Israeli government was dismayed by Trump’s recent firing of John Bolton, the hawkish national security advisor whose views on Iran aligned closely with Netanyahu’s.

Voting results will color reception of the long-delayed peace plan being put together by Trump’s son-inlaw and advisor, Jared Kushner. If Netanyahu triumphs and is able to form a hardright government, he would have a difficult time getting his allies to make any concession­s to the Palestinia­ns, which could torpedo the plan. But Gantz has expressed more willingnes­s to negotiate with the Palestinia­ns.

 ?? Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ??
Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images
 ?? Atef Safadi EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? THE BLUE AND WHITE party of former army Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, center, in Tel Aviv, appeared in early counts to have won one or two more parliament­ary seats than Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party.
Atef Safadi EPA/Shuttersto­ck THE BLUE AND WHITE party of former army Chief of Staff Benny Gantz, center, in Tel Aviv, appeared in early counts to have won one or two more parliament­ary seats than Benjamin Netanyahu’s Likud Party.

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