Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Netanyahu confidant quits party

Ex-ally accuses premier of stirring crisis to escape graft case

- JOSEF FEDERMAN

JERUSALEM — A longtime confidant of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Wednesday that he is quitting the ruling Likud party and joining an upstart political rival, accusing the Israeli leader of plunging the country into an unnecessar­y election campaign in hopes of escaping corruption charges.

With his resignatio­n, Zeev Elkin became the highest-profile official to join a burgeoning group that has abandoned the Likud party.

In a speech on national television, Elkin accused Netanyahu of “destroying the Likud” for personal interests.

“Unfortunat­ely the past two years, and especially recently, I feel more and more that his personal considerat­ions and the whims of his inner circle are playing a central role in the decision-making process,” Elkin said.

He announced that he was joining the new party of Gideon Saar, another longtime Likud figure who quit the party this month. Saar has accused Netanyahu of turning Likud into a “personalit­y cult.”

Israel on Wednesday plunged into its fourth election campaign in two years after Netanyahu and his main coalition partner, Benny Gantz, failed to meet a midnight deadline to pass a budget. Gantz, who formed the coalition with Netanyahu in May after three inconclusi­ve elections, accused Netanyahu of forcing the March 23 election in hopes of securing a friendlier parliament that would grant him immunity from prosecutio­n or dismiss the criminal charges altogether.

Elkin made similar allegation­s, saying he had pleaded with Netanyahu to avoid the previous election campaign by giving up his quest for immunity and forming a coalition with Gantz. Instead, those elections nearly led to an outright victory by Gantz’s Blue and White party along with center and left-wing allies.

“That day, my faith in you cracked,” he said. “That crack has turned into a break recently and especially in recent weeks.”

Elkin accused Netanyahu of forcing the election — in the middle of a pandemic and economic crisis — in a bid to appoint cronies to sensitive posts in the legal system.

“Mr. Prime Minister, you have destroyed the Likud,” he said, claiming that other top party members say similar things in private but are afraid to speak in public.

Elkin has held a number of senior Cabinet posts over the years and has a reputation as a key behind-the-scenes operator on behalf of Netanyahu. In a sign of Netanyahu’s trust in him, Elkin, an immigrant from the former Soviet Union, often accompanie­d the prime minister on trips to Russia to translate and mediate during sensitive security talks with President Vladimir Putin.

The Likud on Wednesday accused Elkin, who currently holds the post of minister for water and higher education, of bolting because he was unhappy with his current place in the party hierarchy. It called Saar’s New Hope party a “refugee camp” for those who have failed in Likud’s internal elections.

On Twitter, Saar welcomed the move, calling Elkin one of the “highest quality, smartest and valuable” politician­s.

Earlier on Wednesday, Sharren Haskel, a junior Likud lawmaker, said she also was joining Saar’s party.

As Israel enters another political campaign, Netanyahu’s legal problems again seem to be the central issue on voters’ minds.

Netanyahu has been charged with fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals in which he is accused of offering favors to media figures in exchange for positive press coverage. His trial is expected to kick into high gear in February, just weeks before the election, when witnesses begin to take the stand. Netanyahu denies the charges and says he is the victim of a witch hunt by the media, police and judiciary.

In a departure from previous campaigns, Netanyahu’s leading challenger­s share his hard-line ideology, which opposes Palestinia­n independen­ce and favors West Bank settlement constructi­on. Instead, their opposition is personal, increasing the likelihood that Israel’s next government will be from the nationalis­t right wing.

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