
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has won a historic fifth term in office, fending off a tough challenge from opposition leader Benny Gantz, with support from right-wing parties. Gantz conceded on Wednesday.
Netanyahu’s Likud party tied with Gantz’s centrist Blue and White Alliance, gaining 35 seats each, but right-wing parties led the way with 66-55 seats — and nearly all of them said they would recommend Netanyahu to President Reuven Rivlin to form the next coalition government.
“We didn’t win in this round. We will make Likud’s life hell in the opposition,” said Yair Lapid, who was number 2 on the Blue and White Alliance ticket, during a televised statement.
Both Netanyahu and Gantz declared victory in the tightly contested election on Tuesday, with both camps claiming their win was “clear” — but the right-wing bloc managed to achieve the minimum 60 seats required to form a coalition in the Knesset, the 120-seat Israeli parliament.
Netanyahu’s victory comes as he is facing multiple corruption probes and after an election campaign which analysts told RT was focused less on policy issues and more on personality, with many Israelis feeling his 10-year tenure as PM was long enough and that it was time for change and a new face.
“The biggest issue is Netanyahu himself: whether Israelis are tired of Netanyahu, whether they’re put off by the stench of corruption that surrounds him, whether they want a change, or whether they prefer to stick with a safe pair of hands and a statesman that obviously enjoys good relations with many world leaders,” Northeastern University Professor Dov Waxman told RT. “There’s actually been very little debate – a striking lack of debate – over Israeli policies.”
Netanyahu embraced and courted support from some of Israel’s most extremist right-wing voices during the campaign, including one group known as the Jewish Power Party which aims to form a theocracy in Israel.