The Mercury News

Embattled leader vows to keep government afloat

- By Josef Federman

JERUSALEM >> Israel's embattled prime minister on Monday vowed to continue to lead the country as his shaky government limped into the opening of parliament's summer session on the verge of collapse.

Less than a year after taking office, Naftali Bennett has lost his parliament­ary majority, his own party is crumbling and a key governing partner has suspended cooperatio­n with the coalition. That has set the stage for a possible attempt by the opposition, led by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to topple the government later this week.

While Bennett appears to be poised to fend off this immediate challenge, his longer-term prospects are uncertain at a time when the government is deeply divided over major issues, Israel is facing an ongoing wave of stabbings and shootings by lone-wolf Palestinia­n attackers and a confrontat­ion with the United States over West Bank settlement constructi­on is looming.

Boaz Toporovsky, the acting coalition chairman, acknowledg­ed the coalition is in the midst of a “serious crisis” but said he was optimistic it would survive. “Everyone understand­s that we're at a crossroads that can bring about, heaven forbid, elections in Israel,” he told the Israeli public broadcaste­r Kan early Monday.

The new government made history when it took office last June, ending prolonged deadlock in which the country went through four rounds of inconclusi­ve elections in just two years. Racing to head off what would have been another election, Bennett cobbled together a diverse coalition of eight parties with little in common beyond their shared animosity toward Netanyahu.

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