San Diego Union-Tribune

ISRAEL TO DISSOLVE PARLIAMENT, HOLD VOTE

- JERUSALEM

Israel’s governing coalition will dissolve parliament before the end of the month, bringing down the government and sending the country to a fifth election in three years, the prime minister said Monday.

The decision plunged Israel back into paralysis and threw a political lifeline to Benjamin Netanyahu, the right-wing prime minister who left office just one year ago upon the formation of the current government. Netanyahu is standing trial on corruption charges but has refused to leave politics, and his Likud Party is leading in the polls.

Once parliament formally votes to dissolve, it will bring down the curtain on one of the most ambitious political projects in Israeli history: an eight-party coalition that united political opponents from the right, left and center, and included the first independen­t Arab party to join an Israeli governing coalition.

But that ideologica­l diversity was also its undoing.

Difference­s between the coalition’s two ideologica­l wings, compounded by unrelentin­g pressure from Netanyahu’s right-wing alliance, led two right-wing lawmakers to defect — removing the coalition’s majority in parliament. When several left-wing and Arab lawmakers also rebelled on key votes, the coalition found it impossible to govern.

The final straw was the government’s inability last week to muster enough votes to extend a two-tier legal system in the West Bank, which has differenti­ated between Israeli settlers and Palestinia­ns since Israel occupied the territory in 1967.

Several Arab members of the coalition declined to vote for the system, which must be extended every five years.

That prevented the bill’s passage and prompted Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, a former settler leader, to collapse the government.

“We did everything we possibly could to preserve this government, whose survival we see as a national interest,” Bennett, 50, said in a televised speech.

Expected to be held in the fall, the snap election will be Israel’s fifth since April 2019.

 ?? MAYA ALLERUZZO AP ?? Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (left) speaks during a joint statement with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid at the Knesset in Jerusalem on Monday. Bennett’s office said his weakened coalition will be disbanded and the country will hold new elections.
MAYA ALLERUZZO AP Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett (left) speaks during a joint statement with Foreign Minister Yair Lapid at the Knesset in Jerusalem on Monday. Bennett’s office said his weakened coalition will be disbanded and the country will hold new elections.

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