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Coalition fails to unite in face of terror attack

November 20, 2014 11:04
Netanyahu: facing splits

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

1 min read

The terror attack on Tuesday morning in a Jerusalem synagogue pushed party politics aside for a while but the tensions in the coalition are still simmering.

On Monday evening, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed senior members of Likud to "prepare for early elections." While most of the coalition's party leaders, including Mr Netanyahu are not in favour of going to the polls after only 20 months in government, it is hard to see how they will bridge over what look now like irrevocable differences.

A series of crises over legislation and the delayed state budget has exposed the coalition's fault-lines. Mr Netanyahu is still enraged over the "Israel Hayom" which passed its first reading in the Knesset last week, and is aimed at preventing the newspaper, owned by his supporter, casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, from being distributed free. Members of three of the coalition's parties, Yisrael Beiteinu, Yesh Atid and Ha'Tnuah, voted in favour of the law.

Then there is the controversial "Jewish Nationality" law, proposed by another coalition partner, Bayit Yehudi, which Mr Netanyahu supports. Yesh Atid and Ha'Tnuah strenuously oppose the law, with Justice Minister Tzipi Livni making a major effort to block it. Bayit Yehudi leader Naftali Bennett, by contrast, has threatened to pull his party out of the coalition if the law is not voted on next week.