Netanyahu says he is on brink of 'very big victory' in Israel election
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[November 02, 2022]
By Maayan Lubell
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -Israel's former Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was set to return to power in one of the
most right-wing coalitions in Israel's history, causing jitters among
Palestinians and Arab neighbours who fear it could ratchet up tensions
across the Middle East.
With roughly 70% of votes counted, Netanyahu's conservative Likud and
its likely religious and far-right allies were on pace to control a
majority in parliament after Israel's fifth election in less than four
years.
"We are on the brink of a very big victory," a smiling Netanyahu told
cheering supporters at his Likud party election headquarters, his voice
hoarse from weeks of campaigning.
Netanyahu's alliance with far-right firebrand Itamar Ben-Gvir, whose
Religious Zionism bloc is on course to become the third-largest party,
has alarmed Palestinians and drawn concern among some allies, including
the United States.
Netanyahu's win will dismay Palestinians and some Arab states, not least
because his right-wing government is likely to expand Israeli settler
activity on the West Bank, but his hard line on Iran means Israel's
recently struck Gulf Arab alliances should hold firm.
"No doubt the result of such a coalition will increase the hostile
attitude towards the Palestinian people and make occupation measures
more extreme" Bassam Salhe, a member of the Executive Committee of the
Palestine Liberation Organization, told Reuters.
Hazem Qassem, a spokesman for the Islamist Hamas movement that controls
the Gaza Strip, told Reuters: "It is clear that the Israelis are leaning
towards more extremism, which also means aggression against our people
would increase."
Netanyahu, whose position appeared to have strengthened after early exit
polls showed him with only a razor-thin majority, vowed to form a
"stable, national government".
The former premier, who in 2020 forged formal diplomatic ties with the
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, said a government under his leadership
would act responsibly, avoid "unnecessary adventures" and "expand the
circle of peace".
Though the landscape could shift as the remaining ballot count trickles
in, the partial tally showed Netanyahu, who is on trial over corruption
charges he denies, leading a bloc of four parties taking 67 of the
Knesset's 120 seats.
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Likud party leader Benjamin Netanyahu
waves as he addresses his supporters at his party headquarters
during Israel's general election in Jerusalem, November 2, 2022.
REUTERS/Ammar Awad
After a campaign dominated by worries over security and the cost of
living, support for centrist Prime Minister Yair Lapid's ruling
coalition appeared to have collapsed, although Lapid stopped short
of conceding victory and said he would wait until the final count.
Less than 18 months out of office, Netanyahu also said he would wait
for official results.
A DIFFERENT WAY
The record 12-year consecutive reign of Israel's longest serving
prime minister ended in June 2021, when Lapid joined estranged
Netanyahu ally Naftali Bennett to stitch together an unlikely
coalition of liberals, rightists and Arab parties.
But the fragile alliance unravelled a year into its rule.
Netanyahu's legal battles have fed the stalemate blocking Israel's
political system since 2019 and deepened the split between his
supporters and opponents. But he said Israelis were thirsty for
change.
"The people want a different way. They want security," Netanyahu
said. "They want power, not weakness ... they want diplomatic
wisdom, but with firmness."
It remains unclear what position Ben-Gvir and fellow far-right
leader Bezalel Smotrich may have in a Netanyahu-led government. But
the strength of their ultra-nationalist Religious Zionism group was
one of the outstanding features of the campaign as they brought it
surging in from the political margins.
Ben-Gvir, who advocates expelling anyone deemed disloyal to Israel,
is a former member of Kach, a group on Israeli and U.S. terrorist
watchlists, and was once convicted for racist incitement, although
he has moderated some of his more extreme positions.
His rise alongside Netanyahu has deepened Palestinian scepticism
over prospects for a political solution after a campaign that
unfolded during increasing violence in the occupied West Bank, with
near-daily raids and clashes.
(Reporting by Maayan Lubell; editing by Richard Pullin, Kim Coghill,
Nick Macfie and Alex Richardson)
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