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Benny Gantz unable to form Israel coalition government | Benny Gantz unable to form Israel coalition government |
(about 2 hours later) | |
The leader of Israel's Blue and White party, Benny Gantz, has said he cannot form a coalition government, making a third election in a year more likely. | The leader of Israel's Blue and White party, Benny Gantz, has said he cannot form a coalition government, making a third election in a year more likely. |
Mr Gantz was given a mandate by the president last month after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also failed to secure a majority in parliament. | Mr Gantz was given a mandate by the president last month after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also failed to secure a majority in parliament. |
Lawmakers now have 21 days to nominate a candidate with majority support. | Lawmakers now have 21 days to nominate a candidate with majority support. |
Blue and White and Mr Netanyahu's Likud party emerged from September's election with almost the same number of seats. | Blue and White and Mr Netanyahu's Likud party emerged from September's election with almost the same number of seats. |
President Reuven Rivlin called on the two leaders to form a national unity government, but they could not agree a power-sharing deal. | President Reuven Rivlin called on the two leaders to form a national unity government, but they could not agree a power-sharing deal. |
The talks broke down over who would serve as prime minister first, Mr Netanyahu's insistence that ultra-Orthodox parties allied to him be included in the government, and Mr Gantz's refusal to serve under a prime minister facing criminal charges. | |
Israel's attorney-general is expected to announce within days whether he intends to charge Mr Netanyahu with bribery, fraud and breach of trust in three cases. | |
The prime minister denies any wrongdoing, but opponents accused him during the election of wanting parliament to grant him immunity from prosecution. | |
After handing back his mandate on Wednesday, Mr Gantz told a news conference in Tel Aviv: "In the past 28 days no stone was left unturned while we tried to form a government that would bring Israel a leadership of dignity, morals and values, a leadership that has been forgotten." | |
"The [right-wing] bloc stood firm, insisting to only see the best interest of one person, before that of the patients lying in hospital corridors," he added. | |
Mr Gantz accused the prime minister of making a "dangerous move" by stopping the party that won the most seats from forming a government, and said there remained 21 days "to achieve a democratic solution". | |
In a video message, Mr Netanyahu accused his rival of being willing to form a minority government "with terror supporters who receive their instructions from Israel's enemies" - an apparent reference to Israeli Arab lawmakers from the Joint List, who the prime minister accused of trying to "destroy the country" on Sunday. | |
"You got one thing straight: Israel needs a unity government," he added. "Everyone can see what we are facing - we are confronting Iran on different fronts and so for Israel's security, for the will of the people, for reconciliation among the people, we need to form a unity government." | |
Earlier on Wednesday, the effective kingmaker, Avigdor Lieberman, blamed both men for the deadlock and said his secular nationalist Yisrael Beitenu party would back neither of them. | |
Mr Gantz "was not prepared to accept the president's plan" for a national unity government, while Mr Netanyahu "was not prepared to separate from his ultra-Orthodox messianic bloc", he added. | Mr Gantz "was not prepared to accept the president's plan" for a national unity government, while Mr Netanyahu "was not prepared to separate from his ultra-Orthodox messianic bloc", he added. |
Sixty-one seats are needed for a majority in the 120-seat parliament, or Knesset. | Sixty-one seats are needed for a majority in the 120-seat parliament, or Knesset. |
Without the support of Yisrael Beitenu's eight lawmakers, Mr Netanyahu's bloc of right-wing and religious parties controls 55 seats. | Without the support of Yisrael Beitenu's eight lawmakers, Mr Netanyahu's bloc of right-wing and religious parties controls 55 seats. |
Mr Gantz's centre-left bloc has 44 seats without Yisrael Beitenu, and would require the support of at least nine members of the Joint list to get a majority. |
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