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Friday, March 29, 2024 | Back issues
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Netanyahu Leads, but Without a Majority

Israel's embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faced an uncertain path to staying in office Tuesday, even as preliminary results showed his Likud party pulling ahead of its opponents in the country's third election in less than a year.

JERUSALEM (AP) — Israel's embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faced an uncertain path to staying in office Tuesday, even as preliminary results showed his Likud party pulling ahead of its opponents in the country's third election in less than a year.

Exit polls on Israeli TV stations showed Likud and its allies capturing 59 seats of the 120 in parliament. That would still put Likud and its ultrareligious and nationalist bloc short of the parliamentary majority required to form a government.

With roughly 90% of votes counted, Netanyhau's bloc looked to be maintaining its lead. Final results were expected later Tuesday and could swing Netanyahu over the top — two weeks before he goes to on criminal corruption charges.

If the official results match the exit polls, and Netanyahu's camp is unable to draw in defectors from opposing camps, Israel's prolonged political gridlock could continue with the prospect of a fourth election.

The uncertainty didn't stop Netanyahu from declaring victory early Tuesday in front of a raucous crowd of supporters.

"This is a victory against all the odds, because we stood against powerful forces," he said. "They already eulogized us. Our opponents said the Netanyahu era is over."

He vowed to immediately begin work to form a new coalition and press a hardline agenda that includes annexing large parts of the West Bank — a step that would undermine any remaining hopes of establishing a Palestinian state. Netanyahu aide Jonathan Urich said efforts were already under way to recruit defecting lawmakers from other blocs.

"I expect that fairly shortly we'll have the missing votes," he told Israel's Army Radio.

Regardless of the final outcome, the election seemed a devastating setback for Benny Gantz's Blue and White party and its allies on the center-left, who had grand ambitions to topple Netanyahu after more than a decade in power. But with Blue and White party trailing Likud by several seats that option appears off the table. Infighting has already begun among the fragmented opposition, with various figures pointing the blame at Gantz for running a lackluster campaign.

Even with his path to the premiership seemingly blocked, Gantz refused to concede defeat.

"We won't let anyone destroy the country. We won't let anyone separate between us. We won't let anyone dismantle Israeli society and crush democracy," he told supporters. "Even if it is difficult, we will win at its end."

Netanyahu's Likud looked set to secure 36 seats to Gantz's Blue and White's 32, with Netanyahu's camp holding an overall edge of 59-54 to Gantz's center-left bloc.

Maverick politician Avigdor Lieberman, whose party is projected to win seven seats, again looms as a key player. Speaking Tuesday, he repeated his campaign pledge that there will not be a fourth election but wouldn't indicate how he would act in case of deadlock.

After the last election in September, both Netanyahu and Gantz, a former military chief, were given opportunities to form coalitions and failed. With Likud projected to be the largest party, Netanyahu would get a first crack at assembling a coalition this time around.

"It's clear that Gantz and his bloc lost, but it is not clear that Netanyahu has a clear victory," said Gideon Rahat, a Hebrew University professor and senior fellow at the nonpartisan Israel Democracy Institute. "It's either a unity government or he will find some defectors from the center-left that will go with him."

The easiest way out of the impasse would be a unity government between Likud and Blue and White, which together command a solid parliamentary majority. They do not have major ideological differences, though Blue and White has staked its claim as the moral alternative to Netanyahu due to his corruption charges.

Gantz has ruled out a partnership so long as Netanyahu remains in charge. After an ugly campaign marked by vicious and unfounded smears against him, Gantz does not appear likely to fold now.

Anti-Netanyahu forces in Israel could still eke out a narrow blocking majority and force yet another vote. But a weary public is largely against that option. Legal analysts warn of a constitutional crisis amid a string of inconclusive elections, meaning the option of a unity government may again be in the cards.

"After such a debased, lowdown, divisive campaign, replete with accusations and mud-slinging, we must mend our fences, heal the wounds, unify Israeli society," former Likud minister and Netanyahu critic Limor Livnat wrote in the Yediot Ahronot daily. "This is the only answer."

Netanyahu was indicted in November on charges of fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes, making him the first sitting Israeli prime minister to be charged with a crime. He denies wrongdoing and says he is the victim of a witch hunt by police, prosecutors and the media.

During the campaign, Netanyahu failed to secure immunity from prosecution. As prime minister, he could still rally public opposition against prosecutors and judges in the case. He also could seek other avenues to delay or derail the proceedings against him.

A unity government between Likud and Blue and White would likely force Netanyahu to drop these plans. It would make Ayman Odeh, leader of the Joint List, the formal leader of the opposition. His umbrella group of Arab-led parties scored its most impressive showing ever, becoming the third-largest faction in parliament.

Categories / International, Politics

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