The Jerusalem Post

Secret Likud, Blue & White meeting raises unity hopes

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Negotiatio­ns between Likud and Blue and White on a national-unity government began in earnest on Monday with a secret meeting that raised optimism an agreement between the two sides could be reached to end the political stalemate.

The meeting took place in the morning before Blue and White leader Benny Gantz officially received the mandate to form a government from President Reuven Rivlin at the President’s Residence in Jerusalem. That the meeting was not publicized and there were no briefings afterward was seen as a sign of progress.

All both sides would say was that the gaps were not wide, an apparent reference to negotiatio­ns over portfolios and the length of the rotation in the Prime Minister’s Office between Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Gantz.

Shas leader Arye Deri, who acts as a political adviser to Netanyahu, met with Blue and White MK Gabi Ashkenazi in another channel that could bear fruit.

But despite the reported progress, Blue and White submitted three bills on the first day of the Knesset on Monday that all targeted Netanyahu. The bills call for limitation of the prime ministeria­l tenure to two terms, the terminatio­n of the tenure of a sitting prime minister or minister under indictment and the prohibitio­n against assigning the task of formulatin­g a governing coalition to an indicted MK.

Likud responded that Blue and White’s behavior was making the coalition negotiatio­ns between the two parties fail and was irresponsi­ble during an internatio­nal crisis such as the coronaviru­s outbreak.

“They say they want to form a unity government, but they advance personal, antidemocr­atic, retroactiv­e legislatio­n aimed at canceling the will of the voters and erasing the votes of more than 2.5 million voters [of Likud and its satellite parties],” a Likud spokesman said. “Even in Iran and Turkey, they don’t advance such laws. That is not the way you act when you really want a unity government.”

Gantz received a four-week mandate from Rivlin to form a government. It was the second time Gantz received the mandate after he failed to form a government after the September election.

Rivlin said he was giving the mandate to Gantz because he received 61 recommenda­tions to form the government, compared with 58 for Netanyahu. He urged Gantz to form as wide a government as possible as soon as possible, adding that a temporary government might be needed at first.

In accepting the mandate, Gantz vowed that within a few days he would “do everything to form a patriotic national government that would be as broad as possible – in

a matter of days, as few days as possible.” He said the government would serve people who voted for Blue and White, people who voted for Likud and people who voted for every other party, both Right and Left.”

Gantz promised to “protect the interests of the people of Judea and Samaria, along with the interests of Israel’s Arab citizens, of the people of Israel’s social and geographic periphery and the people of central Israel.”

He also vowed to “heal Israeli society from the effects of the coronaviru­s epidemic and from the epidemic of divisivene­ss and hate.”

In a further reference to the coronaviru­s, Gantz said he was reaching out his elbow to party heads to join his government, including Netanyahu. Gantz began building a coalition shortly after receiving the mandate from Rivlin.

Just after leaving the President’s Residence, Gantz called Yisrael Beytenu chairman Avigdor Liberman and Labor-Meretz chairman Amir Peretz and told them he intends to form as broad a government as possible to meet the significan­t challenges currently facing the State of Israel. He met with Liberman and Peretz later Monday.

But when Gantz called Yamina’s chairman, Defense Minister Naftali Bennett, and the leaders of Shas and United Torah Judaism and invited them to meet, they all turned him down. Bennett instead called on Gantz to join a government led by Netanyahu.

“I will not meet you until your party disassocia­tes itself from the support of the Joint List, which backs terrorists,” Bennett said he told Gantz. •

orders in the ultra-Orthodox sector “is a process that takes time to implement,” Rosenfeld said, adding that greater enforcemen­t of the orders would be carried out in the near future. He declined to specify a timeframe.

The haredi leadership has been reluctant to adhere to the government’s instructio­ns to close schools and other educationa­l institutio­ns to combat the coronaviru­s pandemic, believing that ongoing Torah study has a positive metaphysic­al impact on the well-being of the Jewish people.

Edelstein, who is the dean of the renowned Ponovitz Yeshiva in Bnei Brak, gave instructio­ns for students to study in smaller groups in the dormitorie­s of the yeshiva, as have other yeshiva deans.

Kanievsky and Edelstein, in a joint letter published Monday morning, instructed their community how to behave during the current national health crisis. “It is appropriat­e to strengthen oneself in Torah study, to be careful over negative speech about others and gossip and to strengthen oneself in the trait of humility and to judge others favorably,” the rabbis wrote.

They cited the famous Talmudic dictum that the world exists “for the sound of children studying Torah,” saying that “this is the greatest protection so that the destroyer not come to Israel’s rooms.”

The rabbis said practical measures must be taken to help prevent the spread of the disease, including dividing up classrooms to smaller groups, increasing the physical space between groups and ventilatin­g synagogues and study halls properly.

They also insisted that anyone who suspects they or any of their family members are ill should not come to the study hall.

“And for certain we must awaken ourselves to [greater] fear of Heaven and repentance, since calamity only comes into the world for Israel, [which must not do like the world, which tries] to strengthen itself in faith in the ‘small power and strength of my hand’ of all countries at this time, but rather to trust in God, who oversees all his creations.

“There will be no one who will be harmed by the disease who was not decreed from above, and the merit of the Torah and all of its strength will protect and save us,” the rabbis wrote.

Ya’acov Veeder, an ultra-Orthodox member of the Bnei Brak Municipal Council for the Likud Party, said the insistence by the rabbinic leadership in keeping schools open was due to an ideologica­l and religious belief in the metaphysic­al importance of Torah study and not to a desire to belittle or denigrate the state authoritie­s or the scientific and medical reality.

“The Talmud says the world stands on three things: Torah, service of God and acts of

kindness. In the ultra-Orthodox worldview, Torah study is a critical aspect in the sustainmen­t of the world, and this is why the rabbis find such difficulty in closing the schools,” Veeder said. •

 ?? (Haim Zach/GPO) ?? BLUE AND WHITE leader Benny Gantz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sit in the Knesset plenum listening to President Reuven Rivlin deliver a speech yesterday, after restrictio­ns were imposed on the number of MKs that could be sworn in at a time.
(Haim Zach/GPO) BLUE AND WHITE leader Benny Gantz and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sit in the Knesset plenum listening to President Reuven Rivlin deliver a speech yesterday, after restrictio­ns were imposed on the number of MKs that could be sworn in at a time.

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