A Likud official is quoted as saying Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu is preparing to build a coalition, one that does not include the chareidi parties. Yediot Achronot quotes the senior official saying “If the prime minister feels he is up against the wall, he will build a coalition that does not include the chareidim.”
Yediot reports that Likud officials still prefer teaming up with the chareidim, but with the reality that Mr. Netanyahu cannot break up the Lapid Bennett team, it is becoming increasingly apparent that he will have to build a coalition that excludes Shas and Yahadut Hatorah towards bringing in Yesh Atid, Bayit Yehudi and Kadima, with a combined 33 seats.
Not all Likud officials are pleased with Mr. Netanyahu’s willingness to exclude Bennett from a coalition and go with the chareidim, for they feel Bennett and his right-wing party belong in the coalition. They feel the prime minister’s bias stems from the personal issues that have occurred in the past between Bennett and the prime minister, or more accurately, between Bennett and Mrs. Sara Netanyahu.
Most agree that if he can go with Bennett, Lapid and Mofaz, the prime minister would prefer to try his luck with that coalition rather than inform the president he requires the two-week extension in the hope of formulating a government, an embarrassing situation for a seasoned politicians like the prime minister. Painting a contradictory picture, some Likud officials are signaling the prime minister will not acquiesce to the Yesh Atid/Bennett coalition and if compelled to do so, he will head to elections again, optimistic Likud will gain seats.
(YWN – Israel Desk, Jerusalem)
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Bayit Yehudi MK Nissan Slomiansky earned the dubious distinction of becoming the first legislator in the 19th Knesset to be the subject of a new police investigation, according to evidence revealed on Monday by Channel 2 and Yediot Aharonot.
Slomiansky was the big winner in the November 13 Bayit Yehudi Knesset primary, receiving 18,601 of the 33,312 votes cast. He beat challengers Ayelet Shaked and Uri Orbach by a wide margin, even though they had the backing of newly elected party chairman Naftali Bennett and Slomiansky did not.
But the reports revealed that some of those votes allegedly came from vote contractors whom Slomiansky paid large sums. Tapes of the vote contractors explaining how Slomiansky bribed them were submitted to police by Bennett, who hired private investigator Nisim Garameh to check whether Slomiansky was using illegal methods against him and his allies.
Vote contractor Avichai Amrusi told Garameh that he registered 4,000 people in Bayit Yehudi’s membership drive. Amrusi said the costs of the membership fees totaled some NIS 60,000, but Slomiansky paid NIS 125,000 to his yeshiva and owed him an equal amount.
“Membership drives are the time to milk politicians,” Amrusi said on the tape.
Amrusi boasted that some of the money was delivered by messenger and some was left for him in Marlboro cigarette boxes in the back of a car in Tel Aviv. He said he was sure he would receive the rest of the money from Slomiansky because paying for votes is illegal and he had all the information written down about when the latter brought him money and how much.
Amrusi later denied his earlier comments in a video released to crisis management strategist Roni Rimon, who was hired by Slomiansky.
Former Shas Tel Aviv city councilman David Ezra also told Garameh that Slomiansky paid him NIS 100,000. He said he told the members he registered to vote for Slomiansky but he ignored Slomiansky’s request to have his loyalists support then-MK Zevulun Orlev in the party leadership contest against Bennett.
“I told people I don’t care who they vote for in the leadership race,” Ezra said. “They can write [slain former Hamas mentor Sheikh Ahmed Yassin for all I care.”
Slomiansky vigorously denied any connection to the vote contractors, telling Channel 2 that the accusations against him were nothing but lies spread by his political rivals. He said he had not been summoned for questioning by police.
“The rumors that I purchased votes in the primary are delusional,” Slomiansky said. “I have been in politics for 21 years, including nine years in the Knesset, and have never been accused of anything unclean. Now there are delusional rumors that even the person spreading them [Amrusi] denies.”
Regarding the timing of the information coming out, Slomiansky said: “The coalition being built will have positions [in the government].
This is a time of rumors and gossip.
There are people who want a post or don’t want me to have a post.”
Slomiansky had been expected to be chosen by the Bayit Yehudi central committee to receive a cabinet post if the party joins the coalition.
But Bennett received the central committee’s permission last week to choose the party’s ministers himself, and he prefers Orbach.
A Bayit Yehudi official said he was not surprised to see the accusations against Slomiansky, because the MK did not honor political deals made with other candidates but still won the primary by a wide margin.
“Slomiansky’s political career is over,” the Bayit Yehudi official said.
“This is a nail in the coffin. I don’t see how Slomiansky can come back from this.”
A Bayit Yehudi spokesman said: “We support the efforts of the police and hope they complete the investigation quickly. We will not tolerate corruption in the party, and we hope the probe finds that no wrongdoing was done.”
A police spokesman said the matter was being vetted to see whether to open a formal investigation.
Meanwhile, Bayit Yehudi negotiators met with Likud Beytenu representatives for coalition talks for the second night in a row late on Monday.
Both sides reported progress in the meetings. •
So who will be the winner next time in a second round of elections?
Bayit Yehudi voters are frustrated with Bennet, Yesh Atid voters see Yair as a novice in politics and voters will avoid a Likud party who picked Livni as his first coalition partner. Maybe the Charedi parties will be the winners and Peres will ask them to form the next government, that would surely be an interesting twist.
zionflag- purim is over…..stay off that vodka!
I don’t see HaBayit HaYehudi or Yesh Atid supporters as being frustrated with either of their leaders. It would seem to me that the only frustrated ones right now are Likud and the chareidim. The Likud has shown itself to be nothing more than a vanity enterprise for Netanyahu to stay in power. His willingness to sign on a marginalized fellow opportunist like Livni to a position of prominence in his nascent coalition gives new meaning to the old adage that “birds of a feather…” The chareidi parties have also achieved nothing, other than to show once again that they serve to keep their constituencies uneducated and unemployed so that the latter remain reliant on the good graces of UTJ, Shas, etc.