Los Angeles Times

Netanyahu scrambles to reach voters

Polls show a growing lead for the Israeli prime minister’s rival days before election.

- By Batsheva Sobelman

— Isaac Herzog,

JERUSALEM — Four days before Israel’s general election, public opinion polls on Friday pointed to a widening lead for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s main rival.

However, the polls also suggested that about 15% of the electorate remained undecided, and Israeli elections are known for substantia­l last-minute vote swings.

Netanyahu’s camp appeared to take seriously his apparent electoral peril. The prime minister, who had made almost no campaign appearance­s, embarked on a blitz of interviews and speeches.

A series of polls Friday — the last that will appear before the vote Tuesday — showed the center-left Zionist Union, an alliance headed by Isaac Herzog, with its largest lead yet, outpolling Netanyahu’s conservati­ve Likud by two to five seats in the 120-member Knesset, the parliament. In Israel, votes are cast for parties, not individual­s.

The prime minister insisted that the Israeli public still backed him, though polls pointed to more people wanting him gone than for his tenure to continue. Netanyahu said voters perhaps mistakenly believed he would agree to form a “unity” government with Herzog’s bloc, a scenario the Israeli leader has ruled out.

“The majority of the public wants me as prime minister, but some think they can enjoy both worlds and vote for another national party and have me as prime minister,” the Israeli leader told several news outlets. “Anyone who wants me as prime minister must vote for Likud.”

Warning of his dovish rivals’ supposedly soft positions on the Palestinia­n issue, Iran and terrorism, the prime minister sounded a familiar note: The country’s security belongs in his hands. But he acknowledg­ed that he could be tossed out of office “if the national camp doesn’t come to its senses and vote for Likud.”

According to the polls, only half of the Likud voters of 2013 intended to vote for the party this time around.

On Friday, Netanyahu reached out to voters over Facebook, taking questions. He said Herzog and opposition candidate Tzipi Livni, with whom Herzog has said he would rotate the premiershi­p, would make concession­s under internatio­nal pressure that would endanger Israel’s security.

“They want to capitulate; we want to stand strong,” he said.

During the campaign, Herzog crisscross­ed Israel with daily appearance­s and interviews. Netanyahu largely refrained from direct campaignin­g, relying on his stature as the incumbent to keep him in the public eye.

After focusing on security and Iran’s controvers­ial nuclear program for much of the campaign, while skirting the socioecono­mic challenges that trouble many Israelis, Netanyahu acknowledg­ed high housing costs and pledged to address the issue. According to polls, Netanyahu’s party has lost considerab­le support to centrist parties focusing on issues such as the cost of living.

While Netanyahu’s camp sounded the alarm, Herzog urged his backers to avoid complacenc­y.

“The polls show the trend clearly; we’re on our way to victory,” Herzog said on Facebook. “But to form the next government we need a much bigger camp.”

With the campaign clock ticking down, candidates and campaigner­s were out in force Friday, competing for attention in crowded public venues. Herzog was attending a rally in the southern city of Ashdod and an open-air market in Tel Aviv, among other stops.

Commentato­rs noted the Zionist Union’s growing lead, but warned not to count Netanyahu out.

“Nothing is final,” columnist Ben Caspit wrote in Friday’s editions of the Maariv newspaper. “The gap is not unerasable.” Sobelman is a special correspond­ent. Times staff writer Laura King in Cairo contribute­d to this report.

head of the Zionist Union ‘The polls show the trend clearly; we’re on our way to victory. But to form the next government we need a much bigger camp.’

 ?? Jack Guez AFP/Getty Images ?? ISAAC HERZOG heads the center-left Zionist Union party.
Jack Guez AFP/Getty Images ISAAC HERZOG heads the center-left Zionist Union party.
 ?? Jim Hollander E PA ?? PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu did little direct campaignin­g.
Jim Hollander E PA PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu did little direct campaignin­g.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States