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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Wed May 6, 2015, 12:27 PM May 2015

Bibi Gets the Shiv - By Josh Marshall

I wanted to update you on a weird turn of events in the Israeli election over the last couple days. Now you're probably saying, what Israeli election? That happened going on two months ago. Well, pretty much ... but not quite. The voting and distribution of Knesset seats is always followed by the 'winner' - usually the leader of the largest party - forming a coalition with smaller parties. That process has now been going on for almost six weeks, with Netanyahu taking his time, playing parties off each other, making his future coalition members sweat and trying to build a coalition with as much freedom and flexibility for himself as he can manage. The entire time it's seemed virtually certain that he would assemble a government with a 67 seat majority (out of 120) made up of rightist parties, religious parties and one center-left party, Kulanu. That was until Monday when Avigdor Lieberman, head of the now greatly diminished Yisrael Beiteinu party said F'it - and more specifically F'you to Netanyahu - and took his party's six seats into opposition.

From all the reports I have seen, no one seems to believe Lieberman is bluffing. There's intense bad blood between the two men, which seems to have been aggravated over recent weeks. And there's a decent argument that Lieberman's and his party's chances of revival are better served outside the government than in it. Regardless, it seems clear Lieberman is out. And that means that the maximum size of a Netanyahu government is now the same as the minimum number of seats he needs to form a majority, 61 seats.

He has zero margin for error.

Netanyahu has already used up the month he has to form a government and the statutory extension he can get from the President. The deadline for the extension is tomorrow night. If he can't seal a deal by then, President Rivlin has to give someone else a chance to form a government.

Now, I would not bet any money on Netanyahu's managing to throw away his incredibly hard fought election victory. But the options he's left with are not good ones. The most immediate of these is that he now has 53 seats taken care of and he needs Naftali Bennett's 8 seats to get to 61. That means Bennett - who has a similarly strained or acrimonious relationship with Netanyahu - holds Netanyahu's fate almost totally in his hands and can demand almost anything of him. The main demands seem to be the foreign ministry and/or the Justice ministry. But both of those are tough asks because Bennett's party is radioactive to the international community on his total rejection of a two state solution and dismal stance on civil rights and minority rights. You may say, who cares? What do they care? Well, Netanyahu cares a lot because as we've discussed in the past, his angle has always been to form governments which are a) substantially right wing b) give him personally a maximally free hand and c) have some figleaf of moderation to placate the US and Europe.

-snip-

http://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/bibi-gets-the-shiv

4 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Bibi Gets the Shiv - By Josh Marshall (Original Post) DonViejo May 2015 OP
Gee, that's a shame. Comrade Grumpy May 2015 #1
Sadly MosheFeingold May 2015 #4
What if no one can form a government? KamaAina May 2015 #2
Remember just before the vote? gratuitous May 2015 #3

MosheFeingold

(3,051 posts)
4. Sadly
Wed May 6, 2015, 02:32 PM
May 2015

He can't form a government because he won't put in farther-right people.

A comprise would be a further leap right.

 

KamaAina

(78,249 posts)
2. What if no one can form a government?
Wed May 6, 2015, 02:12 PM
May 2015

And it does not seem likely that the head of Zionist Union could. How long do they have. Could new elections be in the offing?

gratuitous

(82,849 posts)
3. Remember just before the vote?
Wed May 6, 2015, 02:23 PM
May 2015

Netanyahu, looking to shore up support from the right wing, came out with a strong statement against a two state solution. After securing his victory, Netanyahu rushed out to calm his jittery international allies by saying that he was just kidding, and he wasn't the lunatic ideologue he had to pretend to be so he could win his election.

Well, now he doesn't have any wiggle room on that. He's going to have to go full Zionist or lose the support and money of American evangelicals (Christian and Jewish). It will be interesting to see if the Jewish Home Party allows Netanyahu to adhere to the responsible international citizen position, or if they insist that the pre-election Netanyahu has to be ascendant. Does Netanyahu take the responsible course and kiss his political career good-bye, or does he retreat into reactionaryism and hang on for another term, however short?

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