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Watch out, Lapid: Bibi is back on the prowl

Benjamin Netanyahu will do anything to stop Yair Lapid becoming Israel’s PM

June 23, 2022 14:17
israel politics chaos
7 min read

As the Knesset voted unanimously on Wednesday afternoon to dissolve itself and hold Israel’s fifth election in less than four years, there was no smile on Benjamin Netanyahu’s face. The fall of a government is normally a moment of victory for the leader of the opposition. Indeed, he had worked for this moment for the past year and nine days, ever since he was forced to leave the Prime Minister’s chair in the plenum, which he had occupied for over 12 years, and take the more modest desk, where Yair Lapid was still collecting his papers.

But now that it had arrived, he was grappling with a dilemma. All the polls on the television channels the previous night had shown the bloc of parties that supports him winning 59 or 60 seats in the coming election. Just one or two short of a majority. On the face of it, turning those figures into a victory seemed within reach. All it would take would be boosting turnout in Likud strongholds by a fraction, combined perhaps with one of the parties of the opposing bloc slipping under the electoral threshold. Then that majority that eluded him in the four previous elections would finally be in his grasp. But as an inveterate consumer of polls, Netanyahu is aware of just how difficult that will be.

He knows that Israel is still deeply polarised. Despite the unpopularity of the departing government, a small but consistent majority of voters still do not want Netanyahu’s return. His bloc of four parties remains committed to him and none are threatened by the threshold. His opponent Lapid will almost certainly have to work much harder to gain the support of a majority in the next Knesset. But Lapid will be the Prime Minister as he goes into the election. And with the likeliest result just more deadlock, Lapid will remain PM for the time being.

Knesset members of United Torah Judaism have already publicly warned that so far as they are concerned, this is their last election for a while. They’re still supporting Netanyahu this time around, but if he can’t form a coalition, they will consider other candidates and alliances to stave off a sixth election.