Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Tuesday, April 23, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Netanyahu Criminal Trial Set for 2 Weeks After Election

The criminal trial for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will begin March 17, court officials said Tuesday, shaking up the final stretch of a contentious election campaign and hurting the longtime Israeli leader's hopes of forming a new government after the vote.

JERUSALEM (AP) — The criminal trial for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will begin March 17, court officials said Tuesday, shaking up the final stretch of a contentious election campaign and hurting the longtime Israeli leader's hopes of forming a new government after the vote.

The announcement means Netanyahu will appear in the Jerusalem court as a defendant just two weeks after the March 2 election. After a campaign in which Netanyahu has worked feverishly to divert attention from his legal woes, the final days of the race are almost certain to play into the hands of his opponents by focusing on the trial.

Netanyahu was indicted in November on charges of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes in a series of scandals. He is accused of accepting lavish gifts from billionaire friends and offering regulatory favors to media moguls in exchange for positive news coverage. Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving prime minister, has denied wrongdoing.

In a brief statement, the court said Netanyahu is expected to attend the initial hearing.

The March 2 election is Israel's third in less than a year. Like the previous elections in April and September, the vote is seen as a referendum on Netanyahu.

The previous elections ended in deadlock, with both Netanyahu's Likud Party and the rival Blue and White, led by former military chief Benny Gantz, unable to secure parliamentary majorities. Opinion polls have predicted a similar outcome in the third.

Gantz said it was a "sad" development that would prevent Netanyahu from focusing on his duties as prime minister.

"Netanyahu will be preoccupied with himself alone. He will not be in a position to look out for the interests of Israel's citizens," Gantz said.

Netanyahu responded by criticizing Gantz without directly addressing the trial.

Netanyahu is desperate to remain prime minister, a position he can use as a bully pulpit to rally public support. He has sought to portray himself as the victim of a witch hunt by overzealous police, hostile prosecutors and the media—similar to the arguments President Trump made in his impeachment.

With the exception of the prime minister, Israeli law requires public officials to resign if charged with a crime. That means that if Netanyahu is forced to give up his position, he would go to trial as a private citizen. Netanyahu in January gave up an attempt to seek immunity from prosecution after concluding he did not have enough support in parliament.

Throughout the current campaign, Netanyahu has gone to great lengths to make voters forget about his trial. He has sought to painted himself as a global statesman uniquely qualified to lead the country through tumultuous times.

He boasts of Israel's emergence as a natural gas exporter, his strategy of confronting archenemy Iran and warming behind-the-scenes alliances with former Arab foes in the Persian Gulf.

But more than anything, he points to his close friendship with President Trump, bragging that it gives Israel an opportunity to push its international agenda. Just three weeks ago, Netanyahu was welcomed at the White House for a festive event unveiling Trump's long-awaited Mideast plan. The plan greatly favors Israel at the expense of Palestinians.

Netanyahu then jetted off to Moscow, where he leveraged his good relations with President Vladimir Putin to win the release of a young Israeli woman who had been jailed on minor drug charges. In recent days he has turned inward, promising young Israelis that he will reduce the high cost of living and assuring voters the country is prepared for the coronavirus scare.

Gantz has focused his campaign almost entirely on Netanyahu's legal troubles and questioning his fitness to serve.

Yohanan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute, a Jerusalem think tank, said it is difficult to predict how the scheduling of the trial will affect the election. Although the country has long known Netanyahu would go to trial, the setting of the date draws attention to his legal troubles and makes it the central issue of the final stretch.

"The more the discussion is about Netanyahu as a defendant rather than Netanyahu as a statesman, obviously it does not work in Netanyahu's favor," Plesner said.

The bigger impact of Tuesday's announcement could come after the election.

Under Israel's parliamentary system, the prime minister must form a majority coalition with smaller allied parties in order to rule. Opinion polls again are predicting that both Gantz's Blue and White and Netanyahu's Likud will emerge as the largest parties, but short of securing the necessary parliamentary majority with their partners.

Together, the two parties could control a majority of seats and form a unity government. Gantz has repeatedly said he is open to a power-sharing agreement with Likud, but not under Netanyahu's leadership when he is facing serious criminal charges. The odds of Gantz compromising are even lower now that the trial is imminent.

Other parties, and perhaps even members of the Likud, may also be reluctant to line up behind a prime minister on trial.

That could turn attention to President Reuven Rivlin, who is responsible for choosing a prime minister-designate after the election.

The president typically holds several days of consultations after the election before choosing the head of the party who he believes has the best chances of forming a coalition. The designated prime minister is then given up to six weeks to negotiate a coalition deal with his partners, meaning Netanyahu's trial would begin in the middle of this sensitive period.

After the past two elections, Rivlin gave Netanyahu the first crack at forming a government, and in September, he floated a power-sharing proposal in which Netanyahu and Gantz would rotate as prime ministers, with Netanyahu serving first.

Unless Likud defies the polls and scores an overwhelming victory, it will be difficult to tap Netanyahu as the prime minister-designate days before he goes on trial, Plesner said.

"The president's roadmap for how to form a coalition no doubt will now dictate that Gantz would be first, rather than Netanyahu," he said.

Categories / Criminal, International, Politics, Trials

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...