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		Israel's Netanyahu left teetering after close election
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		 [September 18, 2019] 
		By Jeffrey Heller 
 JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel's election was 
		too close to call on Wednesday, with a partial vote tally showing Prime 
		Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tied with his main rival, former military 
		chief Benny Gantz.
 
 An official result was still hours, perhaps days off. But with more than 
		63 percent of votes counted, the Netanyahu-led right-wing bloc was, as 
		expected, more or less even with Gantz's center-left.
 
 With no single-party majority in the 120-seat Knesset, or parliament, 
		there will likely be weeks of coalition talks before a new government is 
		formed.
 
 The ballot's wildcard, former Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, 
		emerged as a likely kingmaker as head of the secular-nationalist Yisrael 
		Beitenu party.
 
 Lieberman has been pushing for a unity government comprised of the 
		biggest parties. He declined to back Netanyahu's bid to form a narrow 
		right-wing and religious coalition after an April election, bringing 
		about Tuesday's unprecedented repeat vote.
 
 Addressing Likud party faithful, Netanyahu, Israel's longest-serving 
		premier, sipped water frequently and spoke hoarsely. He made no claim of 
		victory or concession of defeat, saying he would await final results.
 
		
		 
		  
		His dead-of-night appearance was a far cry from his triumphant - and in 
		the end premature - declaration five months ago that he had won a close 
		election.
 Gantz was more upbeat, telling a rally of his Blue and White party that 
		it appeared "we fulfilled our mission", and he pledged to work toward 
		forming of a unity government.
 
 "Now it's time for the real race," he later told reporters.
 
 CALL FOR A UNITY GOVERNMENT
 
 Campaigns run by Likud and Blue and White pointed to only narrow 
		differences on many important issues: the regional struggle against 
		Iran, the Palestinian conflict, relations with the United States and the 
		economy.
 
 An end to the Netanyahu era would be unlikely to bring about a 
		significant change in policy on hotly disputed issues in the peace 
		process with the Palestinians that collapsed five years ago.
 
		Based on the partial vote count, Israel's main TV stations, Channel 12 
		and 13, projected Likud and Blue and White would each have 32 seats. 
		With support from smaller, like-minded parties, each was projected to 
		command a bloc of about 55 or 56, short of a majority.
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			Sara Netanyahu gestures next to her husband, Israeli Prime Minister 
			Benjamin Netanyahu, as he speaks at the Likud party headquarters 
			following the announcement of exit polls during Israel's 
			parliamentary election in Tel Aviv, Israel September 18, 2019. 
			REUTERS/Ammar Awad 
            
 
            That left Lieberman, whose party was forecast to win 9 seats. On 
			Wednesday, he reiterated his call for a unity government but said he 
			had not yet spoken to Gantz or Netanyahu.
 "There is only one option - a national unity government, a broad, 
			liberal government, and we will not join any other," Lieberman told 
			reporters.
 
 Netanyahu, who highlighted his close relationship with U.S. 
			President Donald Trump during the campaign, said in his 3 a.m. 
			speech at Likud election headquarters in Tel Aviv that he intended 
			to establish a "strong Zionist government" that would reflect the 
			views of "many of the nation's people".
 
 Gantz has ruled out joining an administration with Netanyahu if the 
			Israeli leader is indicted on looming corruption charges.
 
 The Joint Arab List made a strong showing in Tuesday's election and 
			was projected to capture 12 seats in parliament, compared with 10 
			won by various Arab factions in April's election.
 
 Three corruption investigations and the Israeli attorney general's 
			announced intention to charge him with fraud and bribery have also 
			chipped away at Netanyahu's seeming invincibility, 10 years into 
			consecutive terms as prime minister marked by a sharp focus on 
			security that resonated with voters.
 
 Netanyahu, 69, who can argue at a pre-trial hearing in October 
			against indictment, has denied any wrongdoing.
 
 An election loss could leave him more at risk of prosecution in the 
			graft cases, without the shield of parliamentary immunity that his 
			current political allies had promised to seek for him.
 
 (Reporting by Jeffrey Heller, Dan Williams, Maayan Lubell and 
			Stephen Farrell in Jerusalem and Akram El-Satarri in Gaza; Editing 
			by Simon Cameron-Moore and Timothy Heritage; ((jeffrey.heller@thomsonreuters.com; 
			+97226322202)
 
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