Become a Member
Opinion

Israeli politics is now about Likud and
 its children

It’s always the same story and Israelis have got used to it, writes Seth J Frantzman

March 25, 2021 12:48
BENJAMIN NETANYAHU F210311AKPOOL01. bwjpg
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaks during a press conference with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban and Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis in Jerusalem on March 11, 2021. Photo by Alex Kolomoisky/POOL ***POOL PICTURE, EDITORIAL USE ONLY/NO SALES, PLEASE CREDIT THE PHOTOGRAPHER AS WRITTEN - ALEX KOLOMOISKY/POOL***
4 min read

With most of the votes counted in Israel on Wednesday afternoon, there were several surprises that awaited an electorate who had gone to bed on Tuesday night with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu looking set to form another unstable government.

The Arab party Ra’am had crossed the threshold needed to enter the Knesset and were set to pick up five seats. This made Ra’am party leader Mansour Abbas the man of the hour, in a sense. A historic triumph for the more Islamic-leaning of the numerous small parties that appealed to Arab voters in Israel, and which have traditionally played no role in governing coalitions. Abbas could change that, working with Netanyahu or with Yair Lapid, whose Yesh Atid party got the second largest number of votes.

Abbas and his five seats are only one of the question marks after election night. Netanyahu’s Likud, which has governed for more than a decade, looks poised to grab 30 seats. This election is a true triumph for him because there were no other parties that even came close to that total.

Yesh Atid, the populist centrist party, has around 18 seats, according to the predicted final outcome.