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Naftali Bennett is about to mark his first year as PM - will it be his last?

The precariousness of his position is not his fault - this was the only government he and Yair Lapid could cobble together in the current Knesset

June 1, 2022 10:18
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Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett leads a cabinet meeting at the Prime Minister's Office in Jerusalem on May 8, 2022. Photo by Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90 *** Local Caption *** ישיבת ממשלה ראש הממשלה נפתלי בנט פגישה ראשונה קבינט שולחן שרים
5 min read

On Monday morning, a shiny blue and white Boeing 767 took off from Ben Gurion Aiport and made the short flight southwards to the Israeli Air Force’s Nevatim Base. Six years after the former Qantas airliner first landed in Israel, the now comprehensively refurbished and upgraded prime ministerial plane was going into storage indefinitely.

It was purchased at the urging of Benjamin Netanyahu, who along with his wife Sara was involved in choosing the colour of fabrics used for the interior cabins. Mr Netanyahu christened the plane Knaf Zion (Wing of Zion) and never got to fly on it.

According to a recent State Comptroller’s report, the cost, including upgrades, was 580 million shekels (£137 million). It is seen by many Israelis as an emblem of the former prime minister’s sense of grandeur and his lengthy period in office.

Knaf Zion’s short service and uncertain future could symbolise Mr Netanyahu’s successor as well. Naftali Bennett was not averse to using the plane for his foreign trips as prime minister.

However, his partner in power and the architect of his coalition, alternate-Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid, has vetoed the idea. Back in his opposition days, he slated its purchase as a frivolous waste of money and as long as he has a say, it will never carry a prime minister abroad.

Meanwhile, Mr Bennett is about to mark his first year as Israel’s 13th prime minister and no-one is willing to bet that it was not his last year in office as well.

Under the terms of the coalition agreement, he is scheduled to hand power over to Mr Lapid in August 2023, but for now he’s struggling even to remain in the job for the duration of the Knesset’s summer session until the end of July.

The precariousness of his position is not his fault. This was the only government he and Mr Lapid could cobble together in the current Knesset, from eight diverse parties with contrary policies and beliefs, who were united only in their desire to replace Mr Netanyahu. And those parties had a total of just 62 Knesset members, two of whom, both members of Mr Bennett’s Yamina party, have already defected (one of them even before the new government was sworn in), leaving the government without a functioning majority. Even before losing the defectors, Yamina was one of the smallest parties in the coalition.

Getting half a Knesset term as the coalition’s first prime minister was the result of deft political maneuvering but it also means that he is in many ways the weakest prime minister in Israeli history, forced to rule through the consensus of his colleagues and with very little control over the policies of his fellow ministers.

Some see this the fatal weakness of his government but it is also a corrective for Israel’s parliamentary system. After long years of Mr Netanyahu’s presidential style, Israel’s prime minister is in a very real sense merely the first among equals.
That doesn’t mean Mr Bennett is devoid of power.