World

Even if Likud loses, Netanyahu could become prime minister


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waves during his election rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, March 15, 2015, two days ahead of legislative elections. Netanyahu seeks his fourth term as prime minister.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu waves during his election rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, March 15, 2015, two days ahead of legislative elections. Netanyahu seeks his fourth term as prime minister. AP

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, his party trailing in polls leading up to Tuesday’s vote, entered the final two days of his campaign Sunday with one card still unplayed: Israel’s complicated electoral system, which doesn’t guarantee that the party with the most seats in Parliament forms the government.

The final polls published ahead of the election Tuesday gave opposition leader Isaac Herzog the edge, with his Zionist Union alliance likely to win four more seats than Netanyahu’s Likud party when the votes are counted.

But that does not mean victory, unless Herzog can form a governing coalition. Neither Likud nor the Zionist Union will garner anything near the 61-seat majority of the 120-seat Parliament required to form a government. So the question becomes which candidate, Herzog or Netanyahu, is more likely to persuade enough of Israel’s smaller parties to join a coalition that commands at leasts 61 votes.

That candidate is most likely to get the nod from Israel’s president, Reuvin Rivlin, a Likud party member who assumed the post in July.

In a last-minute push to get out the vote for his party, Netanyahu on Sunday addressed thousands who gathered in Tel Aviv, warning that if the gap shown by the polls was not closed “there is a real danger that a leftist government will come to power.”

“This is a fateful struggle,” he said. “We can close this gap.”

Herzog, who has accused Netanyahu of ignoring economic hardships of ordinary Israelis, pledged a fight against poverty in a visit with social activists. Earlier he went to the Western Wall in Jerusalem, Judaism’s holiest shrine, and tucked a note with a prayer between its massive stones, in keeping with Jewish custom.

Prayer by either side might be needed. In the 2009 elections, Tzipi Livni, now Herzog’s alliance partner, but then the head of the centrist Kadima party, won 28 seats, one more than Netanyahu’s Likud. But Netanyahu was able to form a majority coalition with rightist and religious allies, becoming prime minister.

This time around, Netanyahu again might have an advantage in forming a coalition with rightist and ultra-Orthodox parties who are his natural allies. The numbers are similar, with polls currently predicting about 26 seats for the Zionist Union versus 22 or so for Likud.

But he now trails in the polls by more seats and with the election hinging in no small way on economic concerns, a strong showing by the Zionist Union could give Herzog a first crack at forming a government and that would likely draw smaller parties to him.

A possible kingmaker is Moshe Kahlon, a former Likud member whose new center-right party, Kulanu, is projected by the polls to gain anywhere from 8 to 11 seats. A former communications minister, Kahlon won broad popularity by opening Israel’s cellphone market to competition, which led to a slashing of rates. He promises to go after more monopolies if elected and is making an open bid to become finance minister.

Analysts say Kulanu has been drawing support from former Likud voters disappointed by Netanyahu’s economic performance and troubled by the high cost of living and rising housing prices.

Kahlon has not said whether he will endorse Netanyahu or Herzog for prime minister after the election, but his support could be crucial to forming a parliamentary majority.

Another key player could be a newly formed alliance of four Arab parties, whose joint slate has been projected by the polls to win as many as 13 seats, possibly becoming the third largest faction in the legislature.

While it is not expected to join a new government, the Arab bloc could provide crucial parliamentary support for a Herzog-led coalition, denying Netanyahu a ruling majority.

Yesh Atid, a centrist party that surged to become the second largest faction in Parliament in elections in 2013, has rebounded from an early slide in the polls and could throw its weight behind a Herzog-led coalition with as many as 12 seats. The party leader, Yair Lapid, served as finance minister in Netanyahu’s outgoing government but was fired after a series of run-ins with the prime minister.

Two ultra-Orthodox parties, Shas and United Torah Judaism, have allied with Netanyahu in the past and are likely to support him again, along with a newly-formed ultra-Orthodox splinter faction, Yahad. Shas is projected to win as many as nine seats and United Torah, possibly seven.

Netanyahu is also assured the support of Jewish Home, a rightist pro-settlement party that was a major partner in his outgoing government and now is projected to get 12 seats.

Yisrael Beiteinu, a party representing Russian-speaking immigrants led by Avigdor Lieberman, the bluntly outspoken Israeli foreign minister, has dropped precipitously in the polls following a police investigation of alleged corruption in its ranks. Lieberman formed a joint slate with Netanyahu in the 2013 election, but now faces possible elimination if his party does not make the four-seat threshold required to enter Parliament.

Polls suggest that Meretz, a small leftist party, faces a similar risk as potential voters desert it for the Zionist Union. Meretz has said it will endorse Herzog for prime minister.

If neither Herzog nor Netanyahu manage to cobble together a majority coalition, they could be compelled to join forces in a unity government, possibly alternating in two-year terms as prime minister.

At a glance

What’s at stake: Voters will elect a 120-member parliament, or Knesset, Israel’s 20th. Citizens vote for party lists, not individual candidates. Seats are allocated in the Knesset according to the percentage of the national vote the parties win.

Who’s running: There are 25 parties running. Key parties are the governing Likud Party, led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu; The Zionist Union, a joint list headed by Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni; The Joint List, a union of Arab parties; Kulanu, led by Likud defector Moshe Kahlon; Jewish Home, led by high-tech millionaire Naftali Bennett; Yesh Atid, led by former TV personality Yair Lapid.

Forming a government: In Israel’s 67-year history, no party has ever won an outright majority of 61 seats, and the country has always been governed by a coalition. After the vote, Israel’s president meets with party leaders to determine who has the best chance of forming a government. The president then taps the head of that party, usually but not necessarily parliament’s largest, to undertake that task. That person will have up to six weeks to form a coalition. If successful, he or she becomes prime minister; if not, the president chooses another party to try. The president could also ask the leaders of the two biggest parties to form a unity government.

Voting: There are 5,881,696 eligible voters. Voter turnout in the last election in 2013 was 67.8 percent. Election Day is a national holiday, and most workers have the day off.

Israel by the numbers: Population: 8.2 million, of whom 75 percent (6.2 million) are Jews, 20 percent (1.7 million) are Arabs and the rest are classified as “others,” most of them non-Jewish immigrants. Per capita GDP is $36,051.

Associated Press

This story was originally published March 15, 2015 at 6:18 PM with the headline "Even if Likud loses, Netanyahu could become prime minister."

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