The Jerusalem Post

Emergency gov’t mulled as compromise to keep Blue and White together

Edelstein expected to allow vote for his ouster today

- • By GIL HOFFMAN

Blue and White leader Benny Gantz is considerin­g joining what would be termed as an “emergency government” under Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for six months, sources in the party said Tuesday, after Gantz held individual meetings with Blue and White MKs at the Knesset.

Joining such a government could enable Gantz to keep

Blue and White together despite the fierce opposition to joining a Netanyahu-led government from members of the party’s leadership “cockpit,” Yair Lapid and Moshe Ya’alon. The six months would be counted as part of Netanyahu’s time in office if a more formal unity government is formed afterward with a rotation in the Prime Minister’s Office.

to exacerbate. In an effort to bring about the reconcilia­tion he wanted all along, Edelstein was the only MK in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s bloc who voted for the formation of Knesset committees headed by MKs from Gantz’s bloc on Tuesday.

It will take time for both sides to recover from that fight and calm down after Edelstein is (presumably) replaced by Blue and White MK Meir Cohen on Wednesday. The problem is that there is no time.

The mandate Gantz received from President Reuven Rivlin is set to end on April 13, which is during Passover. That means it really ends when the holiday starts on April 8, or maybe even a week before, due to the intense preparatio­ns for the holiday, which will be more of a challenge than ever.

Because there does not appear to be any coalition that Gantz could form, Netanyahu will likely get the mandate immediatel­y after Passover ends and the most likely scenario is that an emergency or unity government will be built shortly after that.

If the coronaviru­s plague that has killed three Israelis and infected 1,930 was not enough to persuade the country’s leaders to compromise, maybe reading about 10 other plagues at the Passover Seder will be what does it.

Edelstein might come back to his post then, at least temporaril­y. But he honestly cares more about achieving that unity government than sitting longer in the speaker’s chair. •

and national responsibi­lity,” Netanyahu wrote to Gantz in a Facebook post. “The citizens of Israel need a unity government that will work to save lives and livelihood­s. This is not the time for a fourth election.”

After Netanyahu wrote to Gantz that the gaps between them were small and could be overcome, Gantz responded that their gaps were over matters of essence. He told Netanyahu he would first elect a new Knesset speaker - as the Supreme Court ordered on Monday night and only then try to form a unity government, in which he would serve first as prime minister.

“No political spin or unrestrain­ed attacks on the courts, my political allies and I, will stop me,” Gantz said. “I will first return Israeli democracy to full functionin­g, without fear. After that I will consider all the ways to form a government to fight the coronaviru­s and deal with other challenges that lie before us.

Gantz said Netanyahu must tell the people of Israel clearly that Supreme Court decisions must be followed and that “Israel will not have anarchy.” Knesset Speaker Yuli Edelstein is expected to accept the Supreme Court’s demand to hold a vote to replace him on Wednesday.

Earlier, Gantz told a group of Blue and White activists outside his Rosh Ha’ayin home who came to press him to enter a unity government that he must go first in a rotation in the Prime Minister’s Office.

“At the moment, the mandate is mine,” he said. “There is an expectatio­n that I should come under Netanyahu, as if that is the only alternativ­e. I ran wars. I know how to run national crises no less than him.”

In what could be seen as another overture from Likud to Blue and White, Edelstein accepted Gantz’s party’s request to enable the formation of four new Knesset committees, including a special committee on the coronaviru­s. Edelstein even voted for the formation of the committees while the rest of the MKs in Netanyahu’s Center-Right bloc boycotted the votes.

The Likud and its satellite parties will continue to not participat­e in the proceeding­s of the Knesset and its committees to protest Blue and White’s decision to form the committees without coordinati­on with the Likud’s bloc. The Knesset Arrangemen­ts Committee, led by Blue and White faction chairman Avi Nissenkorn, approved the establishm­ent of six interim committees late Monday night, with the support of Blue and White and its bloc.

“Trampling traditions in the Knesset that there have been from the beginning, they gave themselves the chairmansh­ip and a majority on every committee,” a Likud spokesman said. “The nationalis­t camp’s 58 MKs will not participat­e or give a hand to this anti-democratic behavior. We will continue to struggle against this bullying on behalf of the citizens of Israel.”

The Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee will be led by Lt.-Gen (ret.), MK Gabi Ashkenazi (Blue and White). The Finance Committee will be led by MK Oded Forer (Yisrael Beyteinu.) Those two committees do not require approval by the

Knesset plenum.

There will also be a special Coronaviru­s Committee led by MK Ofer Shelah (Blue and White). A Committee to Prepare the Education System and Special Education for the Next School Year will be led by Meretz leader Nitzan Horowitz. Two special committees on reducing violence in the Arab sector and on labor and welfare will be led by Joint List MKs Mansour Abbas and Aida Touma-Sliman.

“It is precisely during these difficult times that it is so important to have a functionin­g Knesset to maintain stability among the citizens and to preserve Israeli democracy, which is in real danger,” Nissenkorn said. “The initiative­s we are taking today will allow the Knesset to begin work again tomorrow, first and foremost by helping the country deal with the corona crisis.” •

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