The Borneo Post

Israel’s coalition government inches towards collapse

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JERUSALEM: Israel’s precarious coalition government was set to move closer towards collapse on Wednesday with lawmakers expected to approve a preliminar­y measure to dissolve parliament, raising prospects of elections next year.

In a primetime televised address on Tuesday, Alternate Prime Minister Benny Gantz, the key coalition partner of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said his centrist Blue and White party would back a bill to dissolve the Knesset, Israel’s parliament.

But Wednesday’s parliament­ary vote on an opposition proposal marks only a first step.

A bill to dissolve the Knesset will require three additional successful readings before new elections must be called.

But Gantz’s decision to side with the opposition, at least for now, highlights the widening cracks in Israel’s centre- right coalition, imperilled from the start by mistrust, infighting and public recriminat­ions.

“I had no illusions about Netanyahu,” Gantz said in his Tuesday speech.

He reminded Israelis that he battled the prime minister in three consecutiv­e inconclusi­ve elections that did not allow either leader to form a majority government.

Gantz said he decided to agree a unity government with Netanyahu, who he knew to be a “serial promise- breaker”, because he wanted to spare Israelis “an ugly and costly” fourth election, especially as the coronaviru­s pandemic was accelerati­ng.

The Netanyahu- Gantz coalition, agreed in April, included strict power- sharing arrangemen­ts.

Netanyahu, who heads the right- wing Likud party, was to serve as prime minister for the first half of the three- year arrangemen­t.

Gantz had been due to take over as premier in November 2021 but Netanyahu’s critics have always insisted he would find a way to sink the coalition before vacating the prime minister’s office for Gantz.

The unity deal included multiple triggers that would automatica­lly force new elections, including a failure to pass a budget.

Gantz accused Netanyahu of consistent­ly misleading the public over the budget issue to serve his own political ends.

Gantz directly called on Netanyahu to “put a state budget forward”, making clear that if he did so, new elections could be avoided.

Netanyahu released a video shortly before Gantz spoke on Tuesday, urging him to keep the coalition together.

“Now is not the time for elections,” Netanyahu said.

“Now is the time for unity.”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This combinatio­n of file pictures shows Netanyahu (left) attending the weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem and Gantz attending a press conference in Tel Aviv.
— AFP photo This combinatio­n of file pictures shows Netanyahu (left) attending the weekly cabinet meeting at his office in Jerusalem and Gantz attending a press conference in Tel Aviv.

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