The Mercury

Netanyahu faces possible defeat

- Jerusalem

ISRAELI Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, trailing in opinion polls two days before a parliament­ary election, publicly offered the Finance Ministry portfolio to a potentiall­y kingmaking rival yesterday.

Facing possible upset defeat in tomorrow’s vote, Netanyahu has launched a media blitz to counter what appears to be a rising tide of support for his main opponent, the centre-left Zionist Union.

Moshe Kahlon, a former member of Netanyahu’s Likud party, whose newly formed centrist party could be a deciding factor in who becomes prime minister, dismissed the offer as preelectio­n spin.

No party has ever won a majority in Israel’s 120-seat Knesset, and the party leader with the best chance of forming a majority coalition is tasked with leading the new government.

The latest opinion polls predict the Zionist Union taking between 24 and 26 seats in the election, compared with 20 to 22 seats for Likud.

But even if Likud is outnumbere­d, Netanyahu is counting on a larger right-wing block to support his bid for another term, and Kahlon, with around 10 seats in the polls, could tilt things in his favour.

“If I am the one to put together the government, he (Kahlon) will be part of the coalition. Without regard of the number of seats (he wins), he will get the finance portfolio,” Netanyahu said on Israel Radio.

A former communicat­ions minister, Kahlon delighted Israelis by promoting competitio­n in the cellular market, a move that slashed the prices of mobile telephone services.

He broke ranks with Likud after social protests in 2011 and opted to sit out the 2013 election, later forming the Kulanu party and now making a run for the Finance Ministry.

Though a natural partner for Netanyahu, he is being wooed by both sides and has not ruled out joining a coalition led by Isaac Herzog of the Zionist Union.

“We’re 48 hours before the election; there was no doubt such spin would come,” Kahlon told Israel Radio regarding Netanyahu’s offer. “I didn’t ask for the finance portfolio from Herzog or from Netanyahu. I asked for the finance portfolio only from the public.”

Beyond promising to speed up economic reforms that will lower living costs, Netanyahu has kept the focus, for the most part, on security issues.

On social media and in broadcast interviews, the three-term leader has accused unspecifie­d foreign government­s and tycoons of funnelling millions of dollars to opposition activists working to undermine him and boost the Zionist Union joint list, led by Herzog and Tzipi Livni.

They, in turn, have dismissed this as an attempt by Netanyahu to shift voters’ attention from socio-economic problems to security challenges, like the Palestinia­n statehood drive and Iran’s nuclear diplomacy, on which the prime minister argues he alone can resist pressure from abroad. – Reuters

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PICTURE: REUTERS Local residents move debris near homes destroyed by Cyclone Pam in Port Vila, the capital city of the Pacific island nation of Vanuatu, yesterday. The cyclone razed homes, smashed boats and washed away roads and bridges as it struck the area early on...
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