Netanyahu election lead shrinks, raising prospect of another Israel vote
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[March 04, 2020]
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel
appeared headed into another political stalemate on Wednesday after
nearly-complete results indicated Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had
failed to secure a clear majority for a right-wing bloc in parliament,
despite his claim of victory.
With 99% of votes counted, Netanyahu's conservative Likud party was seen
taking 35 of parliament's 120 seats, down from 36 initially projected
after Monday's election. His centrist challenger, Benny Gantz, was seen
holding steady at 32 seats for his Blue and White party.
Israeli premiers generally need a coalition commanding 61 seats for
their governments to survive. Wednesday's tally suggested that, with
like-minded parties, a Netanyahu coalition could now expect to garner
only 58.
The four-term leader has been hamstrung by corruption cases in which he
denies wrongdoing. Gantz has cited Netanyahu's unprecedented indictment
in refusing to join him in a coalition.
Yet Gantz, a former general who leads the centrist Blue and White party,
seemed no closer to clinching a coalition, given ideological differences
in a camp of Netanyahu-naysayers which includes ultranationalist
ex-defense minister Avigdor Lieberman and Arab-Israeli parties.
That could spell further deadlock and another snap election to follow
Monday's vote, which was Israel's third in a year.
Netanyahu had claimed victory on Tuesday. Some Israeli commentators
ridiculed that, on Wednesday, as "fake news".
"Most of Israel's citizens said unequivocally: Just not Bibi," tweeted
Attila Somfalvi, anchor for Ynet TV, using Netanyahu's nickname. "That
raises the danger that Netanyahu will again try to drag the countries to
elections."
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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu gestures as he speaks to
supporters following the announcement of exit polls in Israel's
election at his Likud party headquarters in Tel Aviv, Israel March
3, 2020. REUTERS/Ammar Awad
Netanyahu has faced calls, including from within Likud, to step
aside so he can defend himself in a corruption trial that begins on
March 17. He refuses, and is under no legal obligation to go.
Israeli media said Blue and White might table legislation that would
bar a prime minister under indictment from forming the next
government. Asked about the reports, a Blue and White spokeswoman
said: "All options are currently on the table."
The Joint List, a party representing Israel's 21% Arab minority and
which surged in Monday's election with a projected 15 seats, said it
was cooperating with Blue and White - an apparent confirmation that
the disqualification initiative was under way.
Defence Minister Naftali Bennett, one of Netanyahu's
religious-nationalist coalition partners, described the reported
initiative as "a radical, anti-democratic move".
"The right absolutely opposes this move and we will fight it with
all our might," Bennett said on Twitter.
(Reporting by Dan Williams and Rami Ayyub, Editing by William
Maclean)
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