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Netanyahu’s endless quest

Submitted by Gwynne Dyer
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Gwynne Dyer. File photo

Submitted by Gwynne Dyer

Israelis will vote in their fourth election in two years on Tuesday, but there is already talk of a fifth election later this year. They will just have to go on voting until they get it right.

“Getting it right,” in this context, is electing a stable coalition government led by Binyamin Netanyahu that is willing to pass a law granting him immunity from prosecution for corruption.

“Bibi” has been prime minister of Israel since 2009, and he has been under investigation since 2016 for breach of trust, accepting bribes and fraud. His trial began in 2019, and might well last until the end of this year.

Under Israeli law, a prime minister can remain in office even while he is being tried. The evidence against Bibi looks pretty strong, however — and if and when he were found guilty he would have to step down and might well go straight to jail.

His best bet, therefore, would be to get the Knesset (parliament) to pass a law granting him immunity so long as he is in office. Then it wouldn’t matter what the court decides, so long as he stays in office (and he’s only 71).

Alas, quite a few members of Bibi’s coalition, while they back his government in general, won’t vote for such a law. Israel’s electoral system takes the principle of proportional representation to extremes: any party gaining 3.25 per cent of the national vote gets places in the 120-seat parliament, so forming a coalition is something like sewing a patchwork quilt.

In three elections since April 2019 Netanyahu has successfully formed three majority coalitions, but never without including some party that won’t grant him immunity from prosecution. Even centrist groupings like Benny Gantz’s Blue and White Party can end up in Netanyahu’s coalitions.

In the last one Gantz was actually “alternative prime minister,” scheduled to be prime minister for the second half of the coalition’s term. Netanyahu scuttled that coalition and called another election because he would be exposed to prison if he left office.

It would still really take a parliamentary vote to give Netanyahu immunity, so the hunt for the magic coalition that will deliver that vote continues. It may well continue into a fifth election later this year — one more roll of the dice before the court’s verdict comes down.

The latest opinion polls suggest that the outcome this time will make it hard to build either a pro- or an anti-Netanyahu coalition. Naftali Bennett’s right-wing Yamina Party will probably hold the swing seats, but Bennett’s desire to replace Netanyahu may outweigh his wish to see a right-wing coalition in power.

The best outcome for Netanyahu would certainly be a coalition all of whose members were willing to vote him immunity from prosecution, but once again that probably is not on the cards. Much more likely is an outcome that lets him form another coalition like the last three, willing to back him in the Knesset but not to give him a “Get Out of Jail Free” card.

And of course he could end up out of office, which would not be good for him at all. Within the past dozen years former prime minister Ehud Olmert served sixteen months in jail on quite similar charges, and former president Moshe Katsav did five years of a seven-year sentence for rape. Israel’s politics are sheer chaos, but its legal system works fine.