The former prime minister’s name is once again ubiquitous in the political life of a country set to face its fifth election in just over three years in October
Prime Minister Naftali Bennet and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid are speeding up proceedings so that Israel’s parliament will be dissolved within 24 hours, although the proceedings are most likely postponed until Monday. The coalition partners so far want to hurry so that Benjamin Netanyahu does not have room to form a government with the support of defectors without having to wait for new elections. The former prime minister’s name is once again ubiquitous in the political life of a country set to experience its fifth election in just over three years in October.
The elections will be a new impetus between Netanyahu’s supporters and opponents and, according to polls such as those in the 103FM chain, the link between the two blocs will be repeated after the polls have passed, thus securing the 61 seats needed. will be new a challenge. Already immersed in the campaign, Netanyahu announces a future unit executive led by Likud, but knows it will not be an easy task and his corruption trial could cost him dearly.
The formation of a coalition made up of eight parties of different ideology was born amicably, and its end has been so since Bennet hands over control of executive power to Lapid, a change scheduled for mid-next week. In these 375 days, what has been Israel’s 36th government has seen such successes as the approval of the budgets, the first bills to emerge after three years of paralysis.
After announcing the dissolution of parliament on Monday, Haaretz’ media is suggesting that Bennet could even leave politics and return to his life as a businessman. Analyst Yossi Verter announced that the prime minister “will not run for the next election” and stressed that it was finally deputies from Yamina, Bennet’s party, who overthrew the government.
Source: La Verdad
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