国际英语新闻:Prospect of coalition gov't remains elusive after Israeli parliamentary election
With nearly all ballots counted on Wednesday, Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni's centrist Kadima party, which secured 28 mandates, held an extremely narrow lead over Benjamin Netanyahu's center-right Likud party, which gained 27 of the 120 seats of the Knesset (parliament).
Yisrael Beiteinu (Israel is our home), led by hardliner Avigdor Lieberman, came in third place with 15 mandates, pushing Defense Minister Ehud Barak's Labor, Israel's largest left-wing party, to the fourth place with 13 seats.
Fifth and sixth in line were Shas and United Torah Judaism, both religious parties and orthodox in their perspective on national issues.
![]() |
Israeli Foreign Minister and Kadima party candidate Tzipi Livni waves to supporters at an election night rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, Feb. 10, 2009. Preliminary results of Israel's general elections released on Wednesday morning showed that the centrist Kadima party won the most seats in the new parliament, but its edge is seen too limited to send its chief Tzipi Livni to the prime minister's office for sure |
Though Livni garnered the support of some 36,000 votes over Netanyahu, his chances of consolidating a right-wing coalition appear stronger than Livni's coalition building options. The right-wing bloc carried 65 seats compared to only 55 for the center-left bloc.
![]() |
Israel's Likud Party Chief Benjamin Netanyahu speaks at an election night rally in Tel Aviv, Israel, Feb. 11, 2009. |
Given Livni's poor coalition options, she indicated Kadima and Likud join forces and even suggested a rotating coalition power whereby both she and Netanyahu would enjoy a period of premiership.
However, Likud members have shot down the possibility of rotation.
"There won't be a rotation," senior Likud member Silvan Shalom told Army Radio on Wednesday, noting that the method is chosen when there is a 60-60 balance between the two blocs, but the victory for Likud is clear.
Barry Rubin, director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center of the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, told Xinhua there are three basic options for a coalition.
"The first and simplest is a national unity government comprised of Likud, Kadima and Labor, giving them a coalition of more than 60 seats, a solid government," Rubin said.
![]() |
Avigdor Lieberman, leader of the Israel Beiteinu party, casts his vote at a polling station in a Jew settlement near Jerusalem, Feb. 10, 2009 |
Rubin said the second option was for Netanyahu to create his own center-right coalition for which he would require six different parties, adding that it might prove too complicated to get them all on the same page.
Netanyahu is in talks with Shas leader Eli Yishai, who expressed his willingness to consider a coalition with Lieberman's Yisrael Beiteinu and other right-leaning parties.
As a third option, Livni could also make a coalition with Lieberman and leave out Likud, Rubin said.
Though Lieberman has expressed his interest in joining a right-wing coalition, party officials noted Yisrael Beiteinu had not yet made a final decision regarding who it would support for prime minister.
"We prefer to form a national camp with Netanyahu, but we have not yet ruled out Livni," a senior party official said.
Rubin underscored that political rifts between parties would ultimately be less disabling to a coalition than they appear, saying that "there are no personal antagonisms, no great rivalries. These people could work together."
In the absence of international pressure for an Israeli-Palestinian peace agreement that would compromise Israel's defensible borders, other issues that separate them would be workable, he said.
Ghassan Khatib, vice president of Birzeit University based near Ramallah, told Xinhua that "the result of the election confirms the previous analysis that Israeli society is drifting to the right, which is similar to what we have seen in Palestinian society, which also shows a trend of radicalization of public opinion."
He did not believe Israel's inclination to the right would have any effect on the Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations.
"I don't see a significant difference between Likud and Kadima, especially in terms of the intent that both of them have to continue expansion of the settlements," Khatib said.
Livni and Netanyahu take similar positions about the future relations between Israel and the Palestinians, he noted. "We will continue under this new Israeli government to live the situation of paralysis."
"As far as the political process is concerned, we have already had Livni as foreign minister, and a prime minister from her party, Ehud Olmert, so we know exactly what the limits of Kadima are," Khatib added.
相关文章
- 欧美文化:Spanish government sacks spy chief after phone tapping scandal
- 欧美文化:Macron visits Berlin on first foreign trip after re-election
- 欧美文化:Two suspects arrested for killing 3 Israelis in stabbing attack
- 欧美文化:At least 8 killed, 45 rescued after boat sunk off Lebanon
- 欧美文化:Feature: Israeli publisher telling stories of China in Hebrew
- 欧美文化:Slovenia braces for tight parliamentary election on Sunday
- 欧美文化:Sudan's acting FM condemns Israeli practices at Al-Aqsa Mosque
- 欧美文化:Mexican president pushes lithium bill after energy reform setback
- 欧美文化:Singapore researchers find lower risk of heart inflammation after COVID-19 jabs
- 欧美文化:Syria calls on UN to interfere to stop "systematic" Israeli strikes