Israel’s acting prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has told supporters he will build a new ruling coalition and said the next government could not depend on Arab parties.
Singling out the United States and its president, Donald Trump, Netanyahu, whose right-wing Likud party came in second in general elections, according to exit polls, said Israel was at a historical juncture ahead of great security and diplomatic challenges and opportunities.
“Negotiations with Trump will decide Israel’s future for decades, so Israel needs a strong, stable and Zionist government,” he said.
“There won’t and cannot be a government supported by anti-Zionist Arab parties who deny the existence of Israel as a Jewish and democratic state, who glorify bloodthirsty terrorists who murder our soldiers,” Netanyahu added.
The acting PM, who has been leading the executive since 2009 after serving as premier between 1996-99, said he had already initiated negotiations with Likud’s potential coalition partners on the right.
Likud could ally with its main rival in these elections, the moderate Kahol Lavan – Blue and White – alliance led by Benny Gantz.
Exit polls appeared to show Netanyahu failing to garner enough seats for a government coalition with his traditional right-wing and ultra-Orthodox partners unless he can convince former defence minister and hardline hawk Avigdor Lieberman to join.
Read the article in The Canberra Times.