Former PM tells reporters Bennett and Lapid’s decision to dissolve Knesset, triggering snap elections, is a chance to ‘get rid of the worst government in the history of Israel’; adds will not form a coalition with Islamist Ra’am party
Moran Azulay |
Published: 06.20.22, 22:03
Opposition leader Benjamin Netanyahu said Monday his faction was preparing for an election, but has not ruled out forming an alternative government without holding a snap vote.
The former prime minister made the comments shortly after Prime Minister Naftali Bennett and Foreign Minister Yair Lapid announced their intention to dissolve the Knesset, triggering Israel’s fifth snap election in just three years.
“Something big has happened here today. People are smiling tonight because they feel we are getting rid of the worst government in the history of Israel,” Netanyahu told reporters, adding that he will not form a coalition with the Islamist Ra’am party and its chairman, Mansour Abbas.
“This is a government that succumbed to terrorism, to blackmail, lost the ability to control the cities of Israel. The country has been yanked from under our feet by this government. There is a sense of loss of personal security – something that bothers everyone.
“The cost of living is setting new heights, there is loss of national pride and people who are afraid to wave Israeli flags.”
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