Jump to content

Israel's Arab party support pushes Gantz ahead of Netanyahu


webfact

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, legend49 said:

Bye Bye Benjamin good mate of Drumpff. Boris in UK you are next start hiding your money.

 

2 minutes ago, Bluespunk said:

Bye bye netanyahu, you won’t be missed. 

The thing is, it's dubious that a new government can be formed under Gantz. Anti-Arab bigotry will keep most of the remaining Knesset members from joining a Gantz administration.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Well, it's certainly a positive move by Arab legislators, and kudos for Odeh making it happen. Hardly trivial as the party he heads is composed out of four factions, at least one of them usually firmly against any such open form of cooperation.

 

Worth bearing in mind that's a recommendation to the President as to who is to be tasked with trying to form a coalition. It doesn't imply full, unconditional support or endorsement. It doesn't even imply seeking to be an active part of the coalition or participate in government (differing views on these issues between the party's factions).

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Netanyahu will be missed by very few people throughout the world. He is a warmonger, he is a terrible negotiator, like his close friend Trump, and he is a hazard to the planet. He stifles any chance of peace with the Palestinians. He is a blight on the face of Israel. This is really good news. Finally, the people seem to be waking up to the reality of this monster.
Yeah Bibi is no prize and it would be great to see him gone but I'd curb your enthusiasm about who might replace him. There was no mandate at all for significant change on policy issues.

Sent from my Lenovo A7020a48 using Thailand Forum - Thaivisa mobile app

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is there a moderate core with a potential leadership in Likud that can annul the link with religious parties and definitively dump Netanyahu? Could Likud continue with a minimum of defections? Something has to give in Likud for Lieberman's party to join in a unity government. Could such a government get serious about a two-state solution? It's the ultimate question.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, spidermike007 said:

Netanyahu will be missed by very few people throughout the world. He is a warmonger, he is a terrible negotiator, like his close friend Trump, and he is a hazard to the planet. He stifles any chance of peace with the Palestinians. He is a blight on the face of Israel. This is really good news. Finally, the people seem to be waking up to the reality of this monster.

 

Netanyahu is many things. But your rant is off mark.

 

To start with, he's not gone yet. Until he does, even if they have to call a new elections, he remains in power.

 

Missed by very few people? About half the electorate in Israel would support him. Trump supporters seem to like him well enough. And then there are various other right wing groups and voters throughout Europe and such.

 

Warmonger? No major wars started during his terms. At least not more so than past Israeli Prime Ministers.

 

Terrible negotiator? Do tell. I think you just tossed it in as leftover from your repetitive Trump rants. To date he managed to form several coalitions, that's not all that easy in Israeli politics. He also managed to mostly avoid committing to any effective or permanent issues regarding the Palestinians - might not be a good thing from your or my point of view, but different for his agenda and his crowd.

 

Stifles any chance for peace with the Palestinians - there's that. But it's also ignoring the fact that the Palestinians themselves aren't doing all that much to achieve peace either.

 

What, in reality, did bite into his support was a combination of corruption charges, the macro-micro gaps gaps in Israel's economy, higher voter turnout, and the emergence of a half-credible alternative. All that, and de facto, Israel's right wing still got more votes.

  • Sad 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, placnx said:

Is there a moderate core with a potential leadership in Likud that can annul the link with religious parties and definitively dump Netanyahu? Could Likud continue with a minimum of defections? Something has to give in Likud for Lieberman's party to join in a unity government. Could such a government get serious about a two-state solution? It's the ultimate question.

 

There's a potential core of resistance to Netanyahu in the Likud party. But for the most part, pushed out anyone who represented a half-viable challenge, and cowed the rest into submission. He's also immensely popular with the party's voter base. So openly going against him, without assurances it wouldn't backfire is a risk most of them won't take.

 

Annul the link with religious parties? Doubt it. There are always some next elections, and demographics go with the orthodox. Changing that would require more guts and foresight than currently on offer.

 

But defections - yes, I think that's one issue that's gonna be kinda big - for both major parties. Seeing as the ideologies of some aren't all that different, it might be possible. Maybe easier for the Likud to keep the ranks together, as the opposing party is more of an ad-hoc collection of interests.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.







×
×
  • Create New...