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Changes in Israel’s leadership, as Naftali Bennett becomes new Prime Minister after parliament votes in 8-party coalition government, ending Benjamin Netanyahu’s 12 years in power

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Naftali Bennett becomes Israeli’s new Prime Minister as parliament votes in coalition government breaking ending the Likud party’s decade plus years of grip on power

With Israel’s parliament narrowly voted 60-59 in favor of the new coalition government on Sunday, Benjamin Netanyahu’s record 12 years in power, [15 years total as PM], ended

The new coalition of 8 parties is headed by Naftali Bennett

Bennett becomes the new prime minister Bennett while Yair Lapid, will be the Foreign Minister, following the vote on Sunday

Bennett will be prime minister until September 2023 before handing the power over to Yair Lapid

Lapid, leader of centrist Yesh Atid party, will succeed Bennett for a further two years as part of a power-sharing deal

Ahead of the vote, a parliamentary debate became heated as Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to ‘topple’ the new coalition, which is led by Naftali Bennett

Former Netanyahu ally, Naftali Bennett [photo], Sunday was sworn in as Israel’s new Prime Minister after the country’s parliament voted in his coalition government, ending Benjamin Netanyahu’s record 12 years in power

Naftali Bennett has become Israel’s new Prime Minister Sunday after the country’s parliament voted in his coalition government. The approval ended Benjamin Netanyahu’s record 12 years in power, as Israel’s parliament narrowly voted 60-59 in favor of the new government on Sunday. Shortly after, Bennett was sworn in as prime minister. 
Bennett, a former ally of Netanyahu turned bitter rival, will now preside over a diverse and fragile coalition comprised of eight parties with deep ideological differences. 
Israel’s longest serving prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu was ousted from power on June 13, after dominating the country’s politics for more than 25 years.  He was replaced by Naftali Bennett and Yair Lapid who took the reins after forming a coalition government with six other parties, including Mansour Abbas’s Islamic conservative Raam party. 
Netanyahu became the country’s longest-serving prime minister in 2019, surpassing Israel’s founding father David Ben Gurion, after holding the office office continuously for 12 years since 2009.
Netanyahu sat silently through the voting. When it was done, the stunned former PM stood up to leave the chamber, before turning around and shaking Bennett’s hand.  He then sat down in the opposition leader’s chair.  

It’s over: Newly ousted Benjamin Netanyahu [left], after the voting was approved Sunday, stood up to leave the chamber, before turning around and shaking Naftali Bennett’s hand. He’d sat silently during the vote
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Yair-Lapid-left-and-Naftali-Bennett-right-1.jpg
Naftali Bennett [right] will be prime minister until September 2023, before handing the power over to Yair Lapid [left], the leader of centrist Yesh Atid party, for a further two years as part of a power-sharing deal
Jubilant people spilled onto the streets of Jerusalem, cheering the new coalition government’s victory in the parliamentary vote on Sunday
In Tel Aviv Israelis celebrate the swearing in of the new government with a foam party as a cannon shoots foam into the crowd on SundayJ

Sunday’s vote ended a two-year cycle of political paralysis in which the country held four elections.
Minutes later, Bennett was sworn into office, followed by members of the new Cabinet. 
Bennett will be prime minister until September 2023, before handing the power over to Yair Lapid, the leader of centrist Yesh Atid party, for a further two years as part of a power-sharing deal.  
In Jerusalem, supporters of the new coalition cheered as the results of the parliamentary vote came in and waved their flags in the air. 
Elated citizens poured into Rabin Square in Tel Aviv on Sunday night after hearing of the results as they danced, hugged each other and cheered. Israelis celebrated with a foam party as a cannon launched the white liquid into the crowd in Tel Aviv.   
Netanyahu, who is on trial for corruption, remains the head of the largest party in parliament and is expected to vigorously oppose the new government. The veteran politician would be banking on the fissures In the delicately crafted multi-party coalition of eight parties, if just one faction bales, it could lose its majority and would be at risk of collapse, giving him an opening to return to power.  

People were covered with foam as they celebrated the parliamentary vote which saw Bennett become the new prime minister. The Israelis celebrated with a foam party as a cannon launched the white liquid into the crowd in Tel Aviv

But in a sign of what is to come, Bennett was heckled and repeatedly interrupted by Netanyahu’s supporters who shouted ‘shame’ and ‘liar’ as he addressed parliament on Sunday. Several of the Netanyahu loyalists were escorted out of the chamber. 
And in a scathing speech, Netanyahu vowed he would be ‘back soon’ and fight against the ‘dangerous’ coalition.  
‘I will fight daily against this terrible, dangerous left-wing government in order to topple it,’ Netanyahu said at the end of his lengthy 30-minute speech in the Knesset, Israel’s Parliament. ‘With God’s help, it will happen a lot earlier than you think it will.’ 
He added: ‘If it’s our destiny to be in the opposition, we’ll do so with our heads high until we take down this bad government and return to lead the country our way.’ 
Signaling his intention to remain active in Middle East affairs, Netanyahu issued a warning to Iran, Hamas and Hezbollah that he won’t be away for long: ‘We’ll be back soon,’ Netanyahu declared.

Benjamin Netanyahu’s record 12 years in power has now come to an end after the vote. The longest serving Israeli leader also has an earlier stint, serving as PM for three years
Bennett reaches out to touch Netanyahu’s arm following the vote which ended Netanyahu’s 12 years in power 
Under a shower of foam, people celebrated in Rabin Square in Tel Aviv on Sunday night after Israel’s parliament voted in the new coalition govt

It remains to be seen how new prime minister, Bennett,  will maintain an unwieldy coalition of parties from the political right, left and center. The eight parties, including a small Arab faction that is making history by sitting in the ruling coalition, are united in their opposition to Netanyahu and new elections but agree on little else. 
They are likely to pursue a modest agenda that seeks to reduce tensions with the Palestinians and maintain good relations with the U.S. without launching any major initiatives. 
On Sunday evening, Bennett opened his first cabinet meeting as prime minister with a traditional blessing for new beginnings. He said: ‘We are at the start of new days,’ adding that his government will work to ‘mend the rift in the nation’ after two years of political deadlock.   
‘Citizens of Israel are all looking to us now, and the burden of proof is upon us,’ he said. ‘We must all, for this amazing process to succeed, we must all know to maintain restraint on ideological matters.’
Alternate prime minister Yair Lapid, who will serve as foreign minister for the first two years of the government’s term, said in brief remarks that ‘friendship and trust’ built their government, and that’s what will keep it going.

On Sunday evening, Naftali Bennett (right) held his first cabinet meeting as prime minister stating that government will work to ‘mend the rift in the nation’ after two years of political deadlock’   

US President Joe Biden was the first world leader to congratulate Bennett on his win and said the United States remained committed to Israel’s security.  
‘I look forward to working with Prime Minister Bennett to strengthen all aspects of the close and enduring relationship between our two nations,’ Biden said. ‘Israel has no better friend than the United States.’
‘United States remains unwavering in its support for Israel’s security,’ Biden, who is currently in Cornwall, UK, for the G7 Summit, continued. ‘My administration is fully committed to working with the new Israeli government to advance security, stability, and peace for Israelis, Palestinians, and people throughout the broader region.’
Bennett tweeted: ‘Thank you Mr. President! I look forward to working with you to strengthen the ties between our two nations.’
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday congratulated Bennett.
‘Germany and Israel are connected by a unique friendship that we want to strengthen further. With this in mind, I look forward to working closely with you,’ Merkel said in a message addressed to Bennett and shared by her spokeswoman Ulrike Demmer on Twitter.

Ahead of the vote, a parliamentary debate became heated as Netanyahu [first, front row], vowed to ‘topple’ the new coalition, which is led by Bennett

Palestinian militant group Hamas said they will confront the new Israeli government that is expected to take office.
Fawzi Barhoum, spokesman for the Islamic militant group, said Sunday any Israeli government is ‘a settler occupier entity that must be resisted by all forms of resistance, foremost of which is the armed resistance.’  
Israel’s deep divisions were on vivid display as Bennett addressed parliament ahead of the vote as he was heckled by supporters of Netanyahu.
Bennett said the country, after four inconclusive elections in under two years, had been thrown ‘into a maelstrom of hatred and in-fighting’.
‘The time has come for different leaders, from all parts of the population, to stop, to stop this madness,’ he said to angry shouts of ‘liar’ and ‘criminal’ from right-wing opponents.
Bennett, a former defense minister, also expressed opposition to U.S. efforts to revive Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers.
‘Israel will not allow Iran to arm itself with nuclear weapons,’ Bennett said, vowing to maintain Netanyahu’s confrontational policy. ‘Israel will not be a party to the agreement and will continue to preserve full freedom of action.’
Bennett nevertheless thanked President Joe Biden and the U.S. for its decades of support for Israel.
Netanyahu, speaking after him, vowed to return to power. He predicted the incoming government would be weak on Iran and give in to U.S. demands to make concessions to the Palestinians. 

Supporters of the new coalition watch the voting session at the Knesset in Jerusalem on Sunday

He also accused Bennett of carrying out the ‘greatest fraud in Israel’s history’ after he formed a coalition with Yesh Atid party leader Yair Lapid, despite saying he had ruled out a government with Lapid before the election. 
Netanyahu said: ‘I’ve heard what Bennett said [about standing firm against Iran], and I’m concerned, because Bennett does the opposite of what he promises,” Netanyahu said. ‘He will fight Iran the same way he won’t sit with [Yesh Atid leader Yair] Lapid, Labor and Ra’am.’  
‘The prime minister of Israel needs to be able to say no to the president of the United States on issues that threaten our existence,’ Netanyahu said during the 30-minute speech, which went past the 15 minutes allocated to him. 
‘Who will do that now?… This government does not want and is not capable of opposing the United States.’  
Yohanan Plesner, president of the Israel Democracy Institute, a nonpartisan think tank, said the new government will likely be more stable than it appears.
‘Even though it has a very narrow majority, it will be very difficult to topple and replace because the opposition is not cohesive,’ he said. Each party in the coalition will want to prove that it can deliver, and for that they need ‘time and achievements.’
Still, Netanyahu ‘will continue to cast a shadow,’ Plesner said. He expects the incoming opposition leader to exploit events and propose legislation that right-wing coalition members would like to support but can’t – all in order to embarrass and undermine them.

The driving force behind the coalition is Yair Lapid, [center] with Bennett [right] on Sunday in parliament, a political centrist who will become prime minister in two years, if the government lasts that long

The driving force behind the coalition is Yair Lapid, a political centrist who will become prime minister in two years, if the government lasts that long.
The new government is meanwhile promising a return to normalcy after a tumultuous two years that saw four elections, an 11-day Gaza war last month and a coronavirus outbreak that devastated the economy before it was largely brought under control by a successful vaccination campaign.
The driving force behind the coalition is Yair Lapid, a political centrist who will become prime minister in two years, if the government lasts that long.
‘A morning of change,’ promised a Sunday tweet by Lapid, who would serve as foreign minister under the coalition deal before taking over the premiership in 2023.
Lapid called off a planned speech to parliament, instead saying he was ashamed that his 86-year-old mother had to witness the raucous behavior of his opponents. In a brief speech, he asked for ‘forgiveness from my mother.’
‘I wanted her to be proud of the democratic process in Israel. Instead she, along with every citizen of Israel, is ashamed of you and remembers clearly why it’s time to replace you,’ he said.
Netanyahu, who is embroiled in corruption charges in an ongoing trial he dismisses as a conspiracy, has been the dominant Israeli politician of his generation, having also served a previous three-year term in the 1990s.

The new prime minister Bennett and Lapid, who is now the Foreign Minister, were in good spirits following the vote on Sunday

Thousands of protesters rallied outside his official residence late Saturday, waving ‘Bye Bye Bibi’ signs.
In Tel Aviv’s Rabin Square on Sunday, Netanyahu’s opponents were gathering for an evening of celebrations, music playing as technicians tested a sound system.
The exigency of The anti-Netanyahu bloc spans the political spectrum, including three right-wing, two centrist and two left-wing parties, along with an Arab Islamic conservative party.
The improbable alliance emerged weeks after an 11-day war between Israel and Hamas, the Islamist group that rules the Palestinian enclave of Gaza, and following inter-communal violence in Israeli cities with significant Arab populations.
Netanyahu, who long ago earned a reputation as Israel’s ultimate political survivor, has meanwhile tried to peel off defectors that would deprive the nascent coalition of its wafer-thin legislative majority. 
It’s unclear if Netanyahu will move out of the official residence. He has lashed out at the new government in apocalyptic terms and accused Bennett of defrauding voters by running as a right-wing stalwart and then partnering with the left.

Awash in a wave of scandals and polarizing hawkish international policies, Bibi Netanyahu has become a divisive figure in Israeli politics, with the last four elections all seen as a referendum on his rule , still Bibi is expected to continue casting a long shadow on Israeli politics
Protesters against the policies of Bibi Netanyahu govt., wear a mask of the PM in chains

Netanyahu’s supporters have held angry protests outside the homes of rival lawmakers, who say they have received death threats naming their family members. Israel’s Shin Bet internal security service issued a rare public warning about the incitement earlier this month, saying it could lead to violence.
Netanyahu has condemned the incitement while noting that he has also been a target.
His place in Israeli history is secure, having served as prime minister for a total of 15 years – more than any other, including the country’s founder, David Ben-Gurion.  
As Netanyahu has lost the premiership, he will not be able to push through parliament changes to basic laws that could give him immunity on charges he faces in his corruption trial.
Netanyahu began his long rule by defying the Obama administration, refusing to freeze settlement construction as it tried unsuccessfully to revive the peace process. Relations with Israel’s closest ally grew even rockier when Netanyahu vigorously campaigned against President Barack Obama’s emerging nuclear deal with Iran, even denouncing it in an address to the U.S. Congress.
But he suffered few if any consequences from those clashes and was richly rewarded by the Trump administration, which recognized contested Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, helped broker normalization agreements with four Arab states and withdrew the U.S. from the Iran deal.

Donald Trump with Benjamin Netanyahu at the White house in 2020. Shared quest for political survival and base with similar ultra rightist leaning had the pair fanning a strong bromance

Netanyahu has portrayed himself as a world-class statesman, boasting of his close ties with Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. He has also cultivated ties with Arab and African countries that long shunned Israel over its policies toward the Palestinians.
But he has gotten a far chillier reception from the Biden administration and is widely seen as having undermined the long tradition of bipartisan support for Israel in the United States.
His reputation as a political magician has also diminished at home, where he has become a deeply polarizing figure. Critics say he has long pursued a divide-and-conquer strategy that aggravated rifts in Israeli society between Jews and Arabs and between his close ultra-Orthodox allies and secular Jews.
In November 2019, he was indicted for fraud, breach of trust and accepting bribes. He refused calls to step down, instead lashing out at the media, judiciary and law enforcement, going so far as to accuse his political opponents of orchestrating an attempted coup. Last year, protesters began holding weekly rallies across the country calling on him to resign.

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Benjamin Netanyahu seen [right] attending Likud Party meeting at the Knesset in March 2009, served as the 9th Prime Minister of Israel between 1996 and 1999. He returned to the role in 2009 until his ousting on Sunday

Netanyahu remains popular among the hardline nationalists who dominate Israeli politics, but he could soon face a leadership challenge from within his own party. A less polarizing Likud leader would stand a good chance of assembling a coalition that is both farther to the right and more stable than the government that is set to be sworn in.   
Sunday’s vote comes at a time of heightened tensions in the Israel-Palestinian conflict, which has grown more bitter in the Netanyahu years, in part due to the expansion of settlements considered illegal under international law in the occupied West Bank.
Meanwhile, right-wing anger has grown in Israel over last week’s postponement of a controversial Jewish nationalist march through flashpoint areas of east Jerusalem.
The ‘March of the Flags’ is now slated for Tuesday, and the agitation surrounding it could represent a key initial test for a new coalition government.
Gaza’s rulers Hamas said that the political developments in Jerusalem wouldn’t change its relationship with Israel.
‘The form the Israeli government takes doesn’t change the nature of our relationship,’ said spokesman Fawzi Barhoum. ‘Its still a colonizing and occupying power that we must resist.’ 

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