Israel’s Prime Minister-designate Binyamin Netanyahu called President Isaac Herzog Wednesday night, minutes before a midnight deadline, to inform the president that he had succeeded in forming a coalition government.
The government, as expected, will comprise Netanyahu’s Likud, which garnered a plurality of votes – 23% – in the November 1 election, along with five additional parties. These include three far-right religious parties (Religious Zionism, Otzma Yehudit, and Noam) that ran on a joint electoral slate, along with two ultra-Orthodox parties (United Torah Judaism and Shas). Together, they represent 64 members of Knesset – a 53% majority in the 120-seat parliament.
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Despite the customary phone call to the president and Netanyahu’s triumphant tweet announcing “I’ve done it,” the Likud has only signed a coalition agreement with one of its five partners.
By law, the new government must be sworn in by January 2, 2023.