San Francisco Chronicle

Israel swears in most right-wing parliament in history

- By Eleanor H. Reich

JERUSALEM — After nearly four years of political deadlock and five elections, Israel on Tuesday swore in the most right-wing parliament in its history.

Prime Minister-designate Benjamin Netanyahu is working to cobble together a far-right and religious governing coalition in the 120-seat parliament, or Knesset. Jewish left-leaning parties — long the champions of negotiatio­ns with the Palestinia­ns — suffered major losses in the Nov. 1 election.

The surging popularity of a right-wing alliance once on the fringes of Israeli society helped propel Netanyahu's political comeback even as he stands trial on corruption charges. Lawmakers burst into applause as Netanyahu took the stage for a photo with other party leaders after the ceremony.

The 25th Knesset was sworn into office with trumpets and choral music just hours after a Palestinia­n assailant went on a deadly rampage in an Israelicon­trolled industrial zone in the occupied West Bank, killing three Israelis and wounding three more before being shot dead. Netanyahu's likely rightwing coalition partners have vowed to act more aggressive­ly against Palestinia­n attackers and protect Israelis.

Israeli President Isaac Herzog appealed for national unity in his speech after the country's five divisive elections, saying Israelis are “exhausted from the infighting and its fallout.”

“Now, the responsibi­lity lies first and foremost with you, the public's elected representa­tives,” he said. “Responsibi­lity to try to wean us off this addiction to never-ending conflicts.”

Herzog also called on the elected representa­tives to safeguard the rights of Israel's minorities who fear the next government coalition — expected to be overwhelmi­ngly male, religious and right-wing — will roll back the achievemen­ts of its predecesso­r on issues like the environmen­t, LGBTQ rights and funding for the Arab population.

The new parliament replaces one of the most colorful and diverse in Israel's history, which had an all-time high of 36 women and a small Arab Islamist party in the government coalition for the first time in history. This Knesset has just 29 women. Its 23 new lawmakers mostly come from Netanyahu's Likud party and the alliance of farright parties known as Religious Zionism.

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