Bangkok Post

Israel inches closer to a unity govt

Gantz move divides anti-Netanyahu bloc

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JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his erstwhile rival Benny Gantz on Sunday announced “significan­t progress” in talks towards forming an emergency unity government amid the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mr Gantz, whose now fractured centrist Blue and White alliance had positioned itself as the alternativ­e to Mr Netanyahu in three inconclusi­ve elections over the past year, was elected parliament speaker on Thursday.

The two men held talks over the weekend “aimed at establishi­ng a national emergency government to deal with the coronaviru­s crisis and the additional challenges facing the State of Israel”, said a joint statement from Blue and White and Mr Netanyahu’s Likud party.

“Significan­t progress was made during the meeting,” it added. “During the course of the day, an additional meeting will be held in order to come to a finalised agreement.”

Both leaders have previously voiced support for a unity government to help combat the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Mr Gantz was tasked with forming a government following March 2 elections — a task he had already been unable to complete after two national polls last year — and there was no guarantee he would succeed this time, given rifts within the anti-Netanyahu bloc.

The former chief of Israel’s army, Mr Gantz has subsequent­ly tempered his long-time opposition to working with Mr Netanyahu, due to the dangers presented by the coronaviru­s.

But that move has provoked an implosion of the anti-Netanyahu bloc Mr Gantz had led.

A parliament­ary committee on Sunday afternoon formalised Blue and

White’s fracture, with Mr Gantz’s faction keeping that name.

The dissidents were rebranded as Yesh Atid-Telem, incorporat­ing the Yair Lapid and Moshe Yaalon parties.

“We will keep a watchful eye over the work of this government and create a real alternativ­e for the State of Israel,” the new grouping said in a statement after the split.

Mr Netanyahu, in office since 2009, was in January charged with bribery, fraud and breach of trust, but the start of his trial has been delayed by the pandemic.

He denies the charges.

The divided anti-Netanyahu forces, who held a narrow majority in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, on Wednesday forced the ouster of Speaker Yuli Edelstein, a member of Mr Netanyahu’s Likud party.

Mr Gantz then put himself forward as a speaker, triggering the break-up of

Blue and White, with Telem and Yesh Atid accusing Mr Gantz of surrenderi­ng “without a fight” to Mr Netanyahu.

On Friday, Mr Gantz justified his move as being “what my nation needs” given the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I won’t be the one who categorica­lly refuses to step in and pull my weight in a state of emergency,” he wrote on Facebook.

There were no official details of the likely makeup of a future government, but Mr Netanyahu has in past weeks proposed 18-month premiershi­p terms — with him taking the first, to be followed by Mr Gantz.

Reports said that at least three people who were not originally part of Mr Gantz’s party would be seeking to join him in Mr Netanyahu’s coalition.

Spokespeop­le for Blue and White and the Likud would not provide any details on what any agreement to form a government might entail.

 ?? AFP ?? An election banner shows Benny Gantz, left, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Ramat Gan, Israel last month.
AFP An election banner shows Benny Gantz, left, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Ramat Gan, Israel last month.

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