Jamaica Gleaner

Netanyahu faces midnight deadline to form coalition

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ISRAELI PRIME Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faced a midnight deadline on Tuesday to put together a new coalition government — or be looking at the possibilit­y of leading his Likud party into the opposition for the first time in 12 years.

Netanyahu has struggled to secure a parliament­ary majority since March 23 — when elections ended in deadlock for the fourth consecutiv­e time in the past two years. Despite repeated meetings with many of his rivals and unpreceden­ted outreach to the leader of a small Islamist Arab party, Netanyahu has not been able to close a deal during a four-week window.

He suffered a last-minute defeat late Tuesday after a key committee failed to hold a vote on his proposal to stage direct elections for the premiershi­p. A main rival, Benny Gantz, said Netanyahu “failed again to form a government. It is now your duty to think of the country, to look honestly at reality and concede your failure”.

Netanyahu’s deadline to form a government was to expire at midnight, at which point the matter returns to President Reuven Rivlin in the absence of an agreement.

A failure to reach a deal would not immediatel­y push Netanyahu out of office.

Rivlin could give him an additional two weeks to form a coalition. He could give one of Netanyahu’s opponents an opportunit­y to form a government, or in a final move of desperatio­n, send the matter straight to parliament.

That would give lawmakers a chance to choose one of their own as a prime minister. If all options fail, the country would face another election this fall, meaning months of continued political paralysis.

In the March 23 election, Netanyahu’s Likud emerged as the largest single party, with 30 seats in the 120-member parliament. But to form a government, he needs to have the support of a 61-seat majority.

That task has been complicate­d in large part by members of his own religious and nationalis­t base.

 ??  ?? Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. AP
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. AP

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