Israel’s latest inconclusive election left no clear path for Netanyahu or his rivals to form a government, setting the stage for protracted coalition talks. The prospects for Raam and Religious Zionism to sit a stable coalition under Netanyahu appear dim.
A conservative Islamist party crossed the threshold to enter parliament and its leader emerged on Wednesday as a possible kingmaker. Mansour Abbas and his Raam party — unlike other Arab political groups before it — have not ruled out joining an Israeli government.
“We are prepared to engage” with either Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s camp or his rivals, Abbas told Israeli radio while stressing that “I’m not in anyone’s pocket”.
On Wednesday, the party was on track to win five seats in Israel’s 120-member Knesset, with roughly 90 per cent of the vote counted.
For the ideologically divided anti-Netanyahu camp, bringing Abbas on board could also prove complicated.
That bloc includes the staunchly secular centrist Yesh Atid party, led by Yair Lapid, religious right-wingers who defected from Netanyahu’s Likud, as well as Abbas’s rivals in the Joint List.