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Amid crisis, PM declares: 61-seat coalition is not an option

by  Shlomo Cesana , Mati Tuchfeld , Yair Altman and ILH Staff
Published on  03-11-2018 00:00
Last modified: 04-30-2021 14:15
Amid crisis, PM declares: 61-seat coalition is not an option

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman in the Knesset plenum

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If Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Lieberman pulls out of the coalition, there will be no choice but to hold early elections, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told Likud ministers on Sunday.

Though a 61-seat coalition in a 120 MK parliament would still constitute a majority, "61 is not an option," Netanyahu said.

"We have major tasks ahead of us. For that to happen, all the [coalition] parties need to reach an agreement and decide that they are continuing together," he told the ministers. "We are working to secure that because the citizens of Israel want a stable government that will complete its term."

Earlier Sunday, the Likud accused Habayit Hayehudi chairman Naftali Bennett of "working to undermine Netanyahu and taking care to arrange work for himself" after Bennett told the Ynet news site that in the event of early elections, Bennett would consider vying "head to head" with Netanyahu for the position of prime minister.

On Sunday, Netanyahu was expected to continue a round of meetings with coalition party leaders in an effort to avert a coalition crisis and a snap election. The crisis revolves around the ultra-Orthodox parties demand for military exemption legislation, holding the state budget hostage to ensure the legislation's passage. Lieberman, a longtime opponent of military draft exemptions for eligible ultra-Orthodox men, threatened to bolt the coalition over the legislation.

Speaking to the Ynet news site hours before Netanyahu was scheduled to resume the meetings he began Saturday night, Bennett said that if Netanyahu "forced" an early election on the public, he could find himself alone, having "lost the country."

In a separate interview to Kan Bet radio, Bennett said that the coalition crisis was "entirely manufactured" and that it "can be resolved."

"Everything depends on Netanyahu," Bennett said. "The public won't forgive someone who calls an unnecessary election. This isn't a Third World country where there is an election every two years. … Holding an election for personal reasons is not OK. If we wind up there, we [Habayit Hayehudi] will have to reconsider our support for the prime minister."

To this, Likud issued a response saying: "While Prime Minister Netanyahu is busy resolving the crisis and stabilizing the right-wing government, Bennett is busy with his own personal election campaign."

On Saturday, the haredi party heads indicated that they would be willing to accept a compromise, but Lieberman made it clear he was unwilling to budge, even at the cost of propelling the country into an early election.

At the start of the weekend, it appeared that a proposed framework deal the coalition partners managed to put together this week would be fleshed out once Netanyahu returned from his weeklong visit to the U.S. The deal calls for the haredi factions to forgo their demand that their revised conscription bill be passed in the requisite three readings to become law before the 2019 state budget is finalized, and accept only a single reading of the bill.

The actual issue of drafting yeshiva students into the military will include the proposal that Yesh Atid chairman Yair Lapid submitted to the previous Knesset, minus the clause that would punish draft dodgers. That clause will be changed to a provision that will revoke the law entirely if the haredi communities fail to meet their military enlistment quotas.

Lieberman, however, insists that he will support only the proposal being sketched out by the defense establishment, arguing that it is the only framework that will have the support of a Knesset majority.

On Saturday, Lieberman tweeted: "There are moments in life when you need to go with what you believe, and not with what is advisable or what will pay off. This is exactly that moment."

Despite the increasingly belligerent tone of the debate, the haredi parties appeared willing to compromise on Saturday. One of the two ultra-Orthodox parties in the Knesset, Shas, has in effect already compromised and agreed that the conscription bill will not come up for a vote before the new state budget is passed. On Saturday, the other ultra-Orthodox party, United Torah Judaism, joined Shas' compromise after rabbis Gershon Edelstein and Chaim Kanievsky gave UTJ legislators a green light to go along with the proposal.

One haredi MK told Israel Hayom that "if it were up to us, we could reach a compromise. If he [Netanyahu] wants an election, we all know that we aren't the reason for it."

Netanyahu said Saturday prior to meeting with the haredi party leaders that he did not want an early election. The prime minister said that if the coalition partners were willing and committed to solving the issue, there was no reason to dissolve the Knesset and call an early election.

Last week, Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon said he would not vote in favor of the compromise conscription bill if Lieberman opposed it. Kahlon's associates said they expected that the Likud would not want to support the compromise if Lieberman voted against it.

On Sunday, Netanyahu was scheduled to meet with Lieberman, Kahlon, and Habayit Hayehudi chairman Naftali Bennett. After the round of meetings is complete, the prime minister is expected to decide whether to move forward with the compromise or dissolve the Knesset.

Also on Sunday, the Ministerial Committee on Legislation was due to debate the compromise bill on haredi conscription, despite the fact that it was submitted after the committee's agenda was officially set. The proposed legislation is a private member's bill authored by Shas MK Yoav Ben-Tzur. Some in the coalition expect that the bill could be subject to last-minute revisions as a result of the political crisis.

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