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It was a year of rookie errors, ending with the far right in cabinet

Bennett burned his bridges on the right, Lapid failed to cajole Labour and Meretz into merging

December 29, 2022 12:08
Netanyahu F221205YS25
Likud Head MK Benjamin Netanyahu seen after coalition talks with Shas chairman MK Arie Deri and Religious Zionist party head MK Bezalel Smotrich outside a hotel in Jerusalem, December 5, 2022. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** בנימין נתניהו יו"ר הליכוד נתניהו פגישה
6 min read

At the time this column was written, it was still unclear whether Israel would match Britain’s record of having three prime ministers in 2022. The swearing-in of Benjamin Netanyahu’s new government could take place on December 29 or January 2.

If the latter, 2022 will have been the first year since 2008 in which Mr Netanyahu was not in office. But even if that is the case, it will still be the year of Mr Netanyahu’s triumph. Perhaps his last big one.

It’s an outcome that was almost unimaginable at the start of 2022. The improbable government of eight diverse parties that had come into being five months earlier seemed, against all odds, to have stabilised.

It had passed its first state budget and prime minister Naftali Bennett was even cutting a swathe on the international stage, from Washington to Moscow.

When war began in Ukraine, there was even a moment when it seemed he may be in a position to broker a ceasefire.

Covid-19 was still causing disruption and yet another variant was scything its way through Israel’s population, but a gamble by Mr Bennett to not send the country into another lockdown and rely instead on a third vaccination shot proved successful. As 2022 began, he seemed to have bolstered his position — but it was not enough.

By forming a government with left-wing and Islamist parties, Mr Bennett burned his bridges with much of the right wing and failed to win the support of new constituencies.

The first six months of the 2022 saw a steady erosion of the government’s ability to govern as, one after the other, fractious members of the coalition foiled key votes.

This led to his inevitable announcement with Yair Lapid on June 20 that the attempts to hold the coalition together had failed and there would be no choice but to hold yet another election.

Ten days later, Mr Bennett was replaced by Mr Lapid. The man who had promised to revolutionise Israeli politics and bring the warring tribes of Israel together had become Israel’s shortest-serving prime minister. The only question remaining was whether Mr Lapid would soon break that record.

But let’s stay with Mr Bennett for a moment. Where did he go wrong?

By most accounts, he had done a decent job as prime minister, delivering a much-needed budget, taking a proactive approach on Covid-19, quietly ramping up Israel’s clandestine campaign against Iran in the region, while working to block a return to the nuclear agreement.

He had proven that Israel could still be a significant player in global affairs without its elder statesman, Mr Netanyahu. So why had it gone wrong so quickly?

His conclusion was that he “failed to realise how powerful the poison machine constantly working against this government was”.

Since taking a break from frontline politics in this year’s election campaign, the man who just six months ago was Israel’s prime minister is now pursuing a personal campaign against outspoken Netanyahu-supporters who defamed him and his family online, targeting them with libel suits and forcing them to apologise, delete their posts and give considerable sums to charity.

Whether Mr Bennett’s new crusade will do anything to turn down the vitriolic nature of online political discourse remains to be seen, but the reasons for his failure as prime minister run much deeper than the campaign to delegitimise his government.

Despite having started his political career 15 years ago as Mr Netanyahu’s chief of staff and being a keen student of his one-time mentor’s methods, Mr Bennett failed to learn one of the most fundamental lessons.

It is that while an Israeli prime minister has many serious duties safeguarding Israel’s security, he can’t allow himself to forget at any point that he remains a politician, at the mercy of his own back-benchers.

Mr Bennett’s Yamina entered the Knesset in 2021 with seven members. It was his failure to ensure the loyalty of the other six Yamina MKs that ultimately cost him his second year as prime minister.

Over the course of a year, three of them refused to support his government and defected. If he could have kept just one of those three, he could have remained in office.

Mr Netanyahu, on the other hand, despite not having a prime minister’s powers, managed to keep every member of the opposition in line, while enticing defectors away from the coalition.