The Borneo Post

Israel swears in new parliament

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JERUSALEM: Israel swears in its new parliament on Tuesday, as veteran hawk Benjamin Netanyahu advances talks with allies on forming a coalition which could be the most right-wing in Israeli history.

Of the 120 lawmakers elected on Nov 1, 64 have endorsed Netanyahu to lead the next government, clearing the way for his promised comeback a er just 14 months in opposition.

The majority secured by Netanyahu’s Likud and its allies – two ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties and the rising far-right Religious Zionism alliance – was expected to usher in a stable government, ending an unpreceden­ted period of political gridlock that saw five elections in less than four years.

While the new parliament will be sworn in later Tuesday, Netanyahu’s coalition talks may grind on for days or even weeks, despite the broad ideologica­l consensus within the bloc supporting his premiershi­p.

Frictions have emerged with different leaders jockeying for cabinet jobs, as is common following Israeli elections.

But Netanyahu is facing particular­ly complex negotiatio­ns this time with the co-leaders of the far-right, Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir, in a position to demand key ministeria­l roles.

Ben-Gvir is the leader of the Jewish Power party who, in his youth, was charged more than 50 times with violence or hate speech. More recently, he has chastised Israel’s security services for not using enough force to counter Palestinia­n unrest.

Smotrich was transport minister in a previous Netanyahu government but, following Religious Zionism’s strong election showing, is now demanding finance or defence.

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