Israeli Knesset votes to dissolve in step towards snap election
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[June 22, 2022]
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israel moved closer on
Wednesday to its fifth election in less than four years after lawmakers
gave an initial nod to dissolve parliament, with a comeback by former
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu already dominating the campaign.
The Knesset voted unanimously to dissolve in a preliminary reading of a
bill expected to be finalised next week, after which the centrist
Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, 58, will take over from Prime Minister
Naftali Bennett at the head of an interim government.
Lapid, who with Bennett ended Netanyahu's record reign a year ago by
forming a rare political alliance of rightists, liberals and Arab
parties, which faltered in past months amid infighting, has cast the
upcoming election as a battle between moderates and Netanyahu-embraced
extremists.
Netanyahu, presently Israel's opposition leader, was delighted by the
move by Bennett and Lapid to disband what he has called the worst
government in Israel's history, hoping to break his own record and win a
sixth term in office.
Four surveys published on Tuesday found Netanyahu's right-wing Likud
party and its likely allied nationalist and ultra-religious parties as
leading the polls, but still short of a governing majority in Israel's
120-seat Knesset.
Their rivals, on the left, right and centre, have vowed to prevent a
return to power by Netanyahu, who is on trial on corruption charges that
he denies.
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A general view shows a session at the Israeli parliament, the
Knesset, for the preliminary reading of a bill to dissolve the
parliament, in Jerusalem, June 22, 2022. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun
Coalition lawmakers are already pushing legislation
that will bar a person under criminal indictment from heading a
government, though it is unclear whether they have enough votes.
"Netanyahu knows if Israel remains a liberal democracy that he will
not be able to cancel his trial," Lapid said at an economic
conference in Jerusalem.
"Our mission is to ensure these people don't take power and not to
let them crush Israel's democracy," Lapid said.
Netanyahu, 72, who has cast his trial as a leftist witch-hunt, has
said his rivals will lean on Muslim Arab lawmakers who he has
described as "supporters of terrorism."
"Only a strong national government headed by Netanyahu will put
Israel back on a right-wing course," Likud said in response to
Lapid's remarks.
The election's exact election date, likely between late September to
early November, will be decided next week.
Lawmakers in Netanyahu's camp have called for a new government to be
formed under his leadership before the final election law is passed,
though that scenario appears remote.
(Additional reporting by Steven Scheer; Writing by Maayan Lubell;
Editing by Alex Richardson, William Maclean)
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