JDN

Yamina won’t join government headed by Lapid, says Bennett

Naftali Bennett visits in the ultra orthodox Jewish town of Elad. September 06, 2020. Photo by FLASH90 *** Local Caption *** àìòã áðè

Yamina head Naftali Bennett said Wednesday that he will not sit in any future government headed by a left-wing party, including the centrist Yesh Atid, but clarified that his party would agree to have Yesh Atid join a potential coalition as a partner.

“The time has come to replace Netanyahu, and it can only come from Yamina,” Bennett told the Kan public broadcaster. “Yamina will not sit in a government led by the left, including with Lapid as prime minister.”

When questioned about his hanging a left-wing label on Lapid, who has described himself as on the right of the political spectrum, Bennett said that Lapid could “call himself a kangaroo if he wants.”

“These elections are within the national camp and I intend to replace Netanyahu,” Bennett said. “Most of the people are right-wing — it cannot be that somebody from the left sits in the prime minister’s office.”

Bennett has campaigned aggressively against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s handling of the pandemic and has presented himself as a candidate for prime minister, although recent polling numbers give him less than half the number of seats Likud is predicted to win.

On Tuesday Netanyahu partly reestablished his bloc of right-wing, religious parties, which signed a loyalty pledge committing to support him as prime minister.

The move will further complicate efforts by Lapid and New Hope leader Gideon Sa’ar — the leaders of the likely second- and third-largest parties, respectively — to form a government.

A poll released Tuesday by Channel 12 showed Netanyahu’s bloc still short of a governing majority. It said his Likud party would be the biggest if the March 23 elections were held today, picking up 28 seats, down from its current total of 36. A poll released by the network last week had Likud winning 29 seats.

The second largest party after Likud in the poll was Lapid’s Yesh Atid party with 18 seats. The next two largest factions were the right-wing New Hope and Yamina parties, which were forecast to get 13 and 11 seats, respectively.

The predominantly Arab Joint List received nine seats in the survey, while the Shas party got eight seats and fellow Charedi faction United Torah Judaism received seven, as did the right-wing, secularist Yisrael Beytenu.

The survey gave the center-left Labor party six seats and Blue and White five, up from other recent polls released by the network in which Gantz had four seats. Rounding out the poll was the far-right National Religious party and the left-wing Meretz, with four seats a piece.

Along with its Charedi allies and the National Religious party, Netanyahu’s Likud-led bloc had 47 seats. Even if Yamina were to join them, the parties would be short of the 61 seats needed for a majority.

While anti-Netanyahu parties had 62 seats between them, they are divided by deep ideological differences and no faction head appeared to have a clear path to forming a government.