The Jerusalem Post

Netanyahu vows to annex settlement­s if he wins election

Likud leader starts effort to woo votes from parties on Right

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu began a campaign over the weekend to take seats away from the Likud’s satellite parties on the Right, in an effort to win more seats for Likud than Blue and White in Tuesday’s election, and ensure that President Reuven Rivlin will ask him to form the next government.

As part of that effort, in an interview with Channel 12 on Saturday night, Netanyahu vowed to annex West Bank settlement­s and evacuate the illegal Palestinia­n village of Khan Al-Ahmar in the West Bank, if he wins another term.

“We are dealing [with the Americans] on exercising Israeli sovereignt­y on Ma’aleh Adumim and other things,” Netanyahu said. “Everyone understand­s the next term will be fateful for guaranteei­ng our security and our control over key territory in Judea and Samaria.”

He said he would not differenti­ate between settlement blocs and isolated communitie­s.

In weekend interviews with Channel 13 and the rightwing Makor Rishon and Israel Hayom newspapers, Netanyahu vowed to not permit a single settlement or a single resident of them to be evacuated.

“That [evacuation] will not be happening,” he told Channel 13. “If that’s the plan, there will be no plan.”

In the Makor Rishon interview, Netanyahu promised more clearly than ever that he would form a government with right-wing parties and not invite Blue and White to join his coalition.

“Anyone with a brain understand­s that a unity government cannot be formed,” he said.

Netanyahu had been careful until this weekend not to try to take votes from parties like Yisrael Beytenu, Kulanu and Shas, because they are in danger of not crossing the 3.25% electoral threshold.

But on Friday morning, he came out to visit Likud activists outside his Jerusalem residence and warned them that his rule was in danger. Just before Shabbat, he taped a video message saying that Blue and White leaders Benny Gantz and Yair Lapid could form the next coalition.

“At the moment, Lapid and Gantz are leading us by four or five mandates,” he said. “If it won’t change, Lapid and Gantz will break the Right bloc and form a left-wing government. It is not imaginary.”

Netanyahu noted that Gantz and Lapid have said they have already negotiated with parties in the Likud’s bloc.

“There is only one way to guarantee that Lapid and Gantz won’t form a left-wing government, and that is to vote Likud,” Netanyahu said. Only a large Likud will block a left-wing government. If you stay home, if you don’t vote Likud, you voted for Lapid and Gantz.”

On Saturday night, the Likud released another video that featured an edited version of a speech by Rivlin in which he spoke about the largest party being a factor in his decision on which party leader to ask to form the government.

In the Channel 12 interview, Netanyahu said right-wing party leaders were not committing to recommend him to Rivlin. When interviewe­r Rina Matzliach responded

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