A coalition crisis is waiting in the wings as the Knesset gears up for its winter session; EU sketches ‘red lines’ in West Bank
Yair Lapid (center), and Tzipi Livni (right), with Moshe Ya’alon (left) at a cabinet meeting last year.
A coalition crisis captures the front pages ahead of the opening of the Knesset’s winter session. The questions remains: will Israel’s government fall apart amid irreconcilable differences, resulting in snap elections?
“The last thing we need right now is elections, that’s the last thing the people of Israel need right now,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is quoted in Israel Hayom saying Tuesday. The paper reports that Netanyahu is scheduled to meet with the heads of the various coalition parties, namely, Finance Minister Yair Lapid, Foreign Minister Avigdor Liberman, Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and Economy Minister Naftali Bennett, on Wednesday. The meeting aims “to agree upon a way to cooperate ahead of the opening of the [Knesset] winter session,” Israel Hayom says.
The real issue at hand, writes Yedioth Ahronoth, is outrage in the coalition over Netanyahu’s withdrawal of support for a bill to amend the legal standing of conversion to Judaism. The purpose of Wednesday’s meeting is to calm tensions in the government.
One member of the Jewish Home party charged that “Netanyahu shot down the conversion reforms in order to suck up to the ultra-Orthodox.”
“He decided to bury the decision in the government for reforming conversion as well as the law in the Knesset,” the senior Jewish Home party official is quoted saying.
Haaretz quotes members of the Likud party saying that “Netanyahu warned in recent days that the coalition is on the verge of collapse and that the government won’t be able to hold out more than a few months.” The paper notes that Netanyahu has been working toward advancing internal Likud elections, as well as forging new alliances ahead of a possible breakdown of the government. His rejection of conversion reform, the paper points out, may be to curry favor with the ultra-Orthodox parties in the Knesset at the expense of the secular moderates such as Yesh Atid and Hatnua.
No longer bros with Bennett, Lapid has found a new ally in Livni, Yedioth Ahronoth reports. According to Livni, “In the Knesset session that begins next week we’ll form single front in the government and in the Knesset on the diplomatic issue, a single bloc, 25 seats.”
“Together in favor of a diplomatic solution, together against ‘Danny Danon-ism’ and against nationalist [fervor]. Also on the issues of religion and state we’ll join forces,” the Hatnua party leader tells the paper. Lapid, in turn, tells Yedioth Ahronoth that the Yesh Atid and Hatnua parties are in “very close cooperation on these two issues,” and adds that on the issue of religion and state they also have the allegiance of Liberman’s Yisrael Beytenu party.
Israel Hayom, however, downplays the significance of the coalition tension over the conversion reform advanced by Livni’s party, reporting that “despite the Hatnua [party] criticism of Netanyahu’s decision” — which it said was to turn down the reform “at this stage” — “even this issue… won’t bring about the breakdown of the coalition.”
Outside the confines of coalition politics, the Israeli media reports on the selection of Jerusalem’s new chief rabbis, a mother’s response to her daughter’s death in Nepal, and tensions between Israel and the European Union over the West Bank.
Israel Hayom reports that an unnamed electoral body selected the two new chief rabbis of Jerusalem — a post that’s regarded as the most prestigious after the chief rabbi of the State of Israel. Rabbi Aryeh Stern was chosen chief Ashkenazi rabbi and Rabbi Shlomo Moshe Amar the chief Sephardi rabbi.
Lapid and Shelob are certainly matched. In all considerations, Netanyahu is the most experienced at opportunism. Lapid and Shelob combined will hold some 14 mandates after elections. The steady Haredi parties 17 or so. Next subject.
There is another item in the article but not that relevant.