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Netanyahu reaches coalition deal
Published Thursday 14/03/2013 (updated) 16/03/2013 15:20
Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet
meeting in Jerusalem, March 10. (Reuters/Sebastian Scheiner, Pool)
JERUSALEM (Reuters) -- Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu clinched deals for a coalition government on Thursday reflecting a shift to the center and a domestic agenda that has shunted peacemaking with Palestinians to the sidelines.

In control of 68 of parliament's 120 seats, the right-wing leader's new administration is expected to take office next week, just days before a visit by U.S. President Barack Obama, his first to Israel since entering the White House.

"There is a government," said Noga Katz, a spokeswoman for Netanyahu's Likud party, citing agreements with the centrist Yesh Atid and far-right Jewish Home parties as well as with a smaller faction led by former foreign minister Tzipi Livni.

Netanyahu's long-time partners, ultra-Orthodox parties effectively blackballed by Yesh Atid and Jewish Home over social benefits and military draft exemptions for religious Jews, will not be in the new coalition born of a Jan. 22 parliamentary election.

The exclusion of the religious parties represents a dramatic political change for an increasingly inward-looking Israel after the surprisingly strong ballot box showings by Yesh Atid, led by former TV news anchor Yair Lapid, and Jewish Home, headed by high-tech millionaire Naftali Bennett.

Although Lapid, has advocated a resumption of peace talks with the Palestinians stalled since 2010, his party's second-place finish was a reflection of a renewed public focus on bread-and-butter issues such as the high cost of living.

"We came into politics specifically to influence health and welfare policies...the time has come to start working," Yesh Atid lawmaker Adi Kol said on Israel's Channel 10 television.

Public expectations are high that the new government could effect real change in what many Israelis see as state coddling of the ultra-Orthodox, whose welfare benefits and exemption from the military provide little incentive or opportunity to learn skills and contribute to the economy.

Netanyahu will turn his attention again to the Palestinian issue and Iran's nuclear drive in his talks with Obama, with whom he has had a testy relationship. But U.S. officials have said Obama is not coming with any peace plan and expectations of any swift movement on the Israeli-Palestinian track are low.

"We hope that this Israeli government will choose peace and negotiations and not settlements and dictation," Palestinian chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said.

Deadline

Lapid and Bennett each said they expected to sign coalition deals with Netanyahu later in the day. Livni made her pact with the prime minister several weeks ago.

The agreements on Thursday were sealed before a March 16 deadline for Netanyahu to announce a new government. Yesh Atid said Lapid would become finance minister. Israeli media reported Bennett would get the trade and industry cabinet post.

Lapid, 49, gained wide backing among young, secular voters who helped fuel massive street protests in 2011 against high food and housing prices.

He and Bennett, 40, took kingmakers' roles in the coalition bargaining by forming a negotiating alliance that frustrated Netanyahu's efforts to retain his largely loyal ultra-Orthodox partners for his third term in office.

Bennett, who Israeli media said would get the industry and trade portfolio, rejects any future Palestinian state and has strong support among Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank.

But he has pledged not to be an obstacle to peace talks, saying that in any case, he does not believe they will achieve anything. Neither Bennett nor Lapid have spoken out in detail on how they would deal with the Iranian issue.

Palestinians have demanded Israel suspend construction in settlements in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, areas captured in the 1967 Middle East war and which they seek, along with the Gaza Strip, for a future state.

Netanyahu has called on the PLO to return to the talks without preconditions. Israel's settlements are illegal under international law.
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1 ) AKeenReader / UK
14/03/2013 12:28
Time will tell of the splits within this coalition. They want a govt in place so that they have some govt ministers to sake his hands. lol

2 ) @ the Editor / USA
14/03/2013 13:04
There are so many photos of Netanyahu with happy expressions*,
but your articles almost always use this same "angry/serious one,
which only serves to vilify the Jewish leader, and make it less likely
that Palestinian people will ever be able to accept peace !!

* http://www.israelnationalnews.com/

3 ) Colin Wright / USA
14/03/2013 13:05
The only thing that can hold this government together will be an external threat. Therefore, there will shortly be an external threat.

4 ) JoeUSA / USA
14/03/2013 15:17
The problem is that successive Israeli governments had been weak and fragmented. This is going to be the 35th government in 65 years . Israeli governments lack the abiltiy to create a consensus about any policy. Constant political paralysis is what led us to the staus quo of instability , no consensus and ineffectiveness to pursue a vision of peace.

5 ) Mel / USA
14/03/2013 16:03
#2:I reckon Ma'an's photo,is a accurate image of Benzion Jnr!U can't beautify UGLY!And,that's how MOST POTUS's,theAmerican people,&the world,see him too!A vicious ankle-chewing TERRIER!Like Pitbull Sharon!All hated-but PLACATED-by our White House.It doesn't matter what new shade of lipstick you put on rabid dogs,they stay RABID DOGS! #3:Colin,you're right!There'll ?be a false-flag"threat",to'justify'Israel's"defense"&SCARE Israeli's intoMORE"pre-emptive"slaughter?WAKE UP SHAMEFUL ISRAEL!

6 ) JoeUSA / USA
14/03/2013 16:06
to#2 . Oh please stop the theatrics. The Palestinians are very familiar with the face of Netanyahu and the face of occupation. No matter what photo you use of either one , shows an ugly face....

7 ) U.S. / Vet
14/03/2013 20:00
# 2 . I see a dumb and empty look ,what a mess

8 ) Democratic / Leadership
15/03/2013 17:34
"As Prime Minister for the 3rd time, I will see to it that the new government works for the benefit of all Israeli citizens, and guarantees first and foremost the security of each and every one of you.
The new government enters upon its stewardship when major challenges in a stormy and turbulent Middle East are gathering around us.
with the help of the Almighty and with your help we will succeed."
- Binyamin Netanyahu

9 ) Mel / USA
15/03/2013 21:43
Whoah!! KING Bibi,of the Jewish-only RAVSHATZ "BrownShirts" JUMPS into BED,with more radical mafia,to "grab"more Arab land for Jewish-colony expansion,using more US tax $'s(ILLEGALLY)to ratchet up Zionist terrorism,in The Occupied Palestinian Territories! AND,tosses Israel's ultra-orthodox Israeli Jews/voters(untermenschen)on the garbage heap! All for the"security"of POLITICAL ZIONISM,at the EXPENSE of Israel,Judaism,regional pluralism & US Nat Sec! STOP FUNDING TERRORIST Nazi-ZIONISM,OBAMA!!!!

10 ) Colin Wright / USA
15/03/2013 22:00
To Democratic #8 'The new government enters upon its stewardship when major challenges in a stormy and turbulent Middle East are gathering around us. ' As I said. An external threat is needed -- and as Netanyahu assures us, one will be found.

11 ) Colin Wright / USA
15/03/2013 22:03
To Joe #4 'The problem is that successive Israeli governments had been weak and fragmented. ' This is not a cause, but a symptom. The fragmentation is a symptom of the fact that Israel is not a nation so much as a coterie of groups with little in common beyond their hatred for those around around them.

12 ) Colin Wright / USA
15/03/2013 22:08
(I)Put the French, or the English, or the Americans, or for that matter, the Palestinians on a planet of their own, and they would remain a body. Obviously, there would be changes -- but a single society would remain. Does anyone seriously think that either the Russian Jews or the Ashkenazim or the Sephardim or the Haredim would do anything but get as far away as fast as they could from their supposed co-nationalists as soon as they could if opportunity afforded?

13 ) Colin Wright / USA
15/03/2013 22:13
(II) As with everything else about Zionism, the notion that Israel is a nation in any sufficient sense is a lie. There is no 'there' there -- and so they have to keep creating a circle of enemies. The only glue that can hold the place bound together is fear of the outsider, hatred towards the outsider, and endless violence directed at the outsider. This will never change -- so long as there is an Israel.

14 ) Colin Wright / USA
15/03/2013 22:16
(III)_It is intrinsically absurd to talk about 'peace with Israel.' Israel could never survive peace. To propose peace is to rule out the possibility of Israel continuing to exist, while to propose that Israel continue to exist is to rule out peace. It may not be useful to emphasize this, but it is the truth, and it needs to be borne in mind when considering what the ultimate goal necessarily is. It is either no more Israel or an eternity of violence and oppression. Those are the choices.

15 ) Outlier / USA
15/03/2013 22:42
Mel and Colin, please find your inner editor. Thanks.

16 ) Israeli1 / Israel
16/03/2013 01:34
How Nazi like #14. But The choice is Israel OR an eternity of violence and oppression. I choose Israel. You can take oppression and violence of the Arabs. In any event, I predicted this very coalition on this board and I Predict again: it will be a successful coalition. The mindset of the parties are similar. And the fact that the neighbors have utterly dissolved into chaos will make defense planning much easier. Not much of any conventional threat to Israel these days.

17 ) Colin Wright / USA
16/03/2013 02:04
re #8 'Democratic': '"As Prime Minister for the 3rd time, I will see to it that the new government works for the benefit of all Israeli citizens...' Meanwhile, the same government is introducing legislation to: 1) redefine Israel as a Jewish rather than a democratic state. 2) have Jewish religious law to serve as inspiration for new legislation 3) drop Arabic as an official language of the state 4)require the state to actively pursue Jewish settlement of all areas

18 ) Colin Wright / USA
16/03/2013 02:07
re #8 'Democratic' (II) : '"As Prime Minister for the 3rd time, I will see to it that the new government works for the benefit of all Israeli citizens...' 5) drop any government obligation to build for other communities living in the state. In short, both Netanyahu and 'Democratic' are lying. Netanyahu, certainly. 'Democratic' perhaps only semi-consciously -- although deep down inside, even 'Democratic' must realize what Israel is.

19 ) Maureen / Australia
16/03/2013 10:07
#2) So what you are saying is only publish photos of Zionist leaders when they are not wearing their real face - the face of a tyrannical occupation?
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