TEL AVIV — Israeli lawmakers voted to dissolve the Knesset on Thursday, paving the way for a new election after Benjamin Netanyahu failed to form a government before a midnight deadline.
Netanyahu preferred a new ballot, set for Sept. 17, to the alternative, under which President Reuven Rivlin could have asked another politician to try to form a ruling coalition.
But the need to go to the polls again so soon after a closely contested April 9 election in which Netanyahu had claimed victory, showed a new weakness in a leader who has been in power for the past decade and who has become the face of Israel for many.
Potential indictments in three corruption cases have only deepened questions about his political survival.
“We will win,” Netanyahu, 69, head of the right-wing Likud party, vowed after parliament voted when the deadline expired for him to assemble his fifth government.
However, he was looking over his shoulder at the Likud benches during the vote, in what some commentators interpreted as concern about any last-minute revolt. Not a single Likud lawmaker wavered in voting for an election.
Israel’s political turmoil will further delay the much anticipated “Trump’s Mideast Peace Plan”
With coalition-building potentially stretching into November once that election is over, the uncertainty seems likely to delay further President Trump’s forthcoming plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
At the White House, Trump voiced regret at the turmoil in Israel and praised Netanyahu, with whom he has been in lockstep in a tough stance on the Palestinians and Iran.
“It’s too bad what happened in Israel,” Trump told reporters. “It looked like a total win for Netanyahu — who’s a great guy. He’s a great guy. And now they’re back in the debate stage and they’re back in the election stage.”
Netanyahu’s and Lieberman’s war of words
The crisis arose — officially, at least — from a feud over military conscription between Netanyahu’s presumed allies: Ex-defense minister and far-right secularist Avigdor Lieberman, and ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties.
Those parties want young religious scholars exempted en masse from mandatory national service. But Lieberman and many other Israelis say they should share the burden.
Faced with the prospect of having to step aside at the end of a 42-day post-election period allowed for putting together a government, Netanyahu instead mustered support to dissolve the Knesset.
He cast Lieberman, a settler in the occupied West Bank, as a leftist for effectively blocking the creation of a right-wing administration and said his erstwhile ally was out to topple him.
“Lieberman is power-drunk, driven by whims and personal ambition,” Netanyahu said in a televised statement.
In a dig that foreshadowed election campaign attack lines, Lieberman retorted that he lives in a settlement, whereas Netanyahu has a home in a beachfront suburb.
“The man from Caesarea is accusing the man from Nokdim of being left-wing?” said Lieberman, head of the Yisrael Beitenu party.
An election poll by Channel 13 TV News showed both men’s parties gaining strength in the fallout. But it also showed that Netanyahu would be unable to form a right-wing government without Lieberman.
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