Netanyahu eyes comeback on eve of Israel election
By Ben Simon
JERUSALEM – Israeli politicians made their final campaign pitches before the divided country on Tuesday (Nov 1) holds its fifth election in less than four years, with hawkish ex-premier Benjamin Netanyahu eyeing a comeback.
The 73-year-old Likud party leader served as prime minister for longer than anyone in Israel’s history before he was ousted in June 2021 by an ideologically-divided coalition forged by the current caretaker Prime Minister Yair Lapid.
That motley alliance lasted only one year, triggering Tuesday’s vote, which will see Netanyahu and his allies try to secure the 61-year seat parliamentary majority in the 120-seat Knesset that has repeatedly eluded them.
The election comes in a year that has seen violence flare in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, with near daily clashes in the occupied West Bank all summer.
‘Bibi’ Netanyahu has long billed himself as the Jewish state’s guarantor of security, but has also been weakened by a trial on corruption charges which he denies.
To beat the camp around centrist Lapid and form a government, Netanyahu’s right-wing party will almost certainly have to rely on its long-standing ultra-Orthodox Jewish allies.
He is also expected to turn to the extreme-right co-led by Itamar Ben-Gvir, known for his virulent anti-Arab rhetoric and incendiary calls for Israel to annex the entire West Bank.
The final pre-election polls, released Friday (Oct 28), underscored that Israel remains mired in an unprecedented era of political deadlock.
The so-called Netanyahu bloc was predicted to take 60 seats in three surveys, from Israel’s Channel 12, Channel 13 and the Kan network.
The polls suggested 56 seats for anti-Netanyahu parties and four seats for an alliance of Arab-led parties that is not expected to back any Israeli government.
If the vote breaks along those lines, with neither camp reaching 61 seats, Israel could potentially be headed for an astonishing sixth election within months.
Lapid voiced confidence on Monday (Oct 31), telling lawmakers from his Yesh Atid party that it will win by offering voters a stark choice – “the anger of the past or the shared good of the future”.
Nearly 6.8 million Israelis are registered to vote, up 210,000 from the last election in March 2021, but voter apathy, especially among many Arab citizens, and rain forecasts have fuelled concerns about low turnout.
Netanyahu has insisted the coalition that ousted him last year– which included an Arab-led party for the first time in Israeli history – was “dangerous” for Israel.
Jerusalem busses have been covered with Likud posters picturing four Netanyahu rivals and the message ‘Once Was Enough’.
They show Lapid, Defence Minister Benny Gantz and Raam party leader Mansour Abbas who joined the ‘change’ coalition after rejecting Netanyahu’s effort to court him.
The fourth face is that of Ahmad Tibi, an Arab opposition lawmaker with the Hadash-Taal party, even though he never joined Lapid’s coalition.
“The future of Israel is at stake,” Netanyahu told army radio Monday. “What kind of government will we have — that of Lapid and the Muslim Brotherhood?” he asked, referring to Raam’s Islamist roots.
“We’ve got to break the tie and win.”
The election comes amid one of the deadliest recent phases in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which has seen some commentators voice fears of a “third intifada” or uprising.
“We are sure the Israeli election will not bring a partner for peace,” Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammed Shttayeh said Monday.
Following a series of fatal attacks on Israelis in March, in which many victims were civilians, Israel has carried out more than 2,000 raids in the West Bank, pursuing Palestinians it accuses of having ties to militant groups.
More than 120 West Bank Palestinians have been killed by Israeli fire this year – including many fighters but also non-combatants – the heaviest toll in the territory since 2015.
There have also been more deadly attacks on Israelis, with three people killed by Palestinian gunmen this month.
The Israeli army has declared it will close West Bank checkpoints on election day except for humanitarian and medical transports or in exceptional circumstances. The crossing to the blockaded Gaza strip will also be closed.
The rising violence could help Netanyahu, commentator Nadav Eyal argued in Israel’s Yediot Ahronot newspaper.
“Terrorism often gets the last word in Israeli elections,” Eyal wrote. “When that happens, it is usually centre-left governments that pay the electoral price.”
– Agence France-Presse
Comments are closed, but trackbacks and pingbacks are open.