Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu’s bloc doesn’t have majority

Prime minister says his rival Benny Gantz is trying to ‘steal’ the Israeli election.

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

JERUSALEM — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s political and legal peril increased Wednesday, as a completed parliament­ary vote tally affirmed his party as the country’s largest, but left his rightwing bloc without the majority it would need to govern.

Less than two weeks before he goes on trial on corruption charges, the 70-yearold prime minister saw fluctuatio­ns in the vote count from Monday’s election shrink the strength of his religious-nationalis­t coalition to three seats fewer than the 61 required for a governing majority.

As opponents sought to deny him a mandate to form a government, an angry Netanyahu accused his chief rival Benny Gantz, a former army chief of staff, of trying to “steal the election.”

With 100% of the regular ballots counted, Netanyahu’s Likud Party had 36 seats, compared with 33 for Gantz’s Blue and White party, according to Wednesday’s tally. That was viewed as a devastatin­g setback for the 60-year-old retired general, who had campaigned hard on a platform of Netanyahu’s unfitness to serve.

But the first-place finish for Netanyahu’s party proved no guarantee of success. In the tally released Wednesday, the seat count for the prime minister’s coalition — which initial exit polls had put as high as 60, the cusp of an overall victory — slipped back to 58, three short of a majority in the 120seat Knesset, or parliament.

That count will not be officially ratified until next week. But it leaves Netanyahu dangerousl­y exposed heading into his March 17 trial on charges of bribe-taking, fraud and breach of trust. He had hoped to shore up his position with a solid election win, then use the powers of his office to shortcircu­it his prosecutio­n.

Even before the final tally, supporters of the prime minister — who staged a splashy celebrator­y rally Tuesday on the basis of early projection­s — sounded a drumbeat of complaints that he was being treated unfairly.

Netanyahu reacted harshly when Gantz on Wednesday proposed legislatio­n that would prevent an indicted prime minister from continuing to serve. Addressing coalition members, the prime minister said Gantz’s move “undermines the foundation­s of Israeli democracy and subverts the will of the voter.”

“We’ll stand strong against it,” he vowed.

Netanyahu denies any wrongdoing in the corruption cases. Gantz has cited the criminal charges in refusing to form a “national unity” government of the two biggest parties while the prime minister heads Likud.

The initial mandate to try to form a government usually, but not always, goes to the head of the largest party. If neither Netanyahu nor Gantz can assemble a ruling majority, a deadlock would send Israelis back to the ballot box again — a prospect dreaded by nearly all.

As it was, Monday’s vote was an unpreceden­ted third national election in less than a year, and a fourth in so short a time frame would be expensive and debilitati­ng.

Political analyst Yaron Dekel, of Israel’s national broadcaste­r, said that instead of giving a mandate to either Netanyahu or Gantz, President Reuven Rivlin could choose instead to throw the matter directly to the Knesset, initiating a 21day period in which a consensus candidate could emerge.

The muddled result of Monday’s vote shifts outsized power to smaller parties like that of former Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, whose secular nationalis­t Yisrael Beiteinu party holds seven seats, under the completed count. Lieberman, once a close ally of the prime minister, reiterated a pledge not to team up with him.

Perhaps the only clearcut victory went to a bloc of parties dominated by Arab citizens of Israel, who make up about a fifth of the electorate. The bloc, known as the Joint List, won 15 parliament­ary seats, making it the third-largest party.

In the aftermath of Monday’s

vote, political tensions rose in tandem with fears of the novel coronaviru­s. Health officials, who have reported 15 diagnosed cases, said up to 100,000 people might be called upon to selfquaran­tine, possibly including those over the age of 60. Entire hospital wards were being readied.

Israel also closed its borders to noncitizen travelers from a clutch of countries including France, Germany and Austria, and imposed a 14-day quarantine on anyone arriving from more than a dozen countries in which the virus has reached epidemic proportion­s.

 ?? Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ?? ARYEH DERI, right, who chairs Israel’s Shas party, whispers to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting of the right-wing bloc at the Knesset.
Menahem Kahana AFP/Getty Images ARYEH DERI, right, who chairs Israel’s Shas party, whispers to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a meeting of the right-wing bloc at the Knesset.

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