The Israeli prime minister Netanyahu promised on Tuesday that he would make every effort to end the “election cycle” in occupied Palestine.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday vowed to make every effort to end the “election cycle” in occupied Palestine.
Benjamin Netanyahu’s remarks came after he was appointed by the head of the Zionist regime to form a cabinet.
The Israeli prime minister, who was among the newly sworn-in members of the Likud party in the Knesset, said he would “make every effort to get Israel out of the election cycle.”
Netanyahu’s remarks came as Israeli President Rovin Rivlin re-appointed Netanyahu to the cabinet on Tuesday, but he is not expected to be able to end the political stalemate in occupied Palestine.
According to Rivlin, Netanyahu has 28 days to work to form a cabinet and introduce it to the Knesset (Israeli parliament).
The final result of the fourth parliamentary elections of the Zionist regime was announced on the 5th of Farvardin. These elections signaled the continuation of a stalemate in the political arena of this regime.
The Israeli election commission announced on April 25 that the right-wing Likud party, led by Benjamin Netanyahu, and its allied parties won a total of 52 of the 120 seats in the Knesset (Israeli parliament).
A number of other parties, with different views seeking to oust Netanyahu, also won 57 seats. With these details, neither side will have the 61 seats needed to form a cabinet.
If neither side is able to form a 61-seat coalition, the Zionist regime will be forced to hold elections for the fifth time in two years in an unprecedented event.
The recent vote is the fourth, and in occupied Palestine, the meaning of the referendum on Netanyahu’s ability to stay in power was largely corrupted during the indictment against him in several cases.
Netanyahu has been charged with three counts of corruption: fraud, abuse of public trust, and accepting bribes. He has denied the allegations against him, accusing law enforcement agencies and the media of opposing him.
The first hearing in Netanyahu’s “4,000 corruption” case took place yesterday. Netanyahu later described his trial as a “coup attempt.”
The prime minister of the Zionist regime had already appeared in court on the 20th of February and, together with his accomplices in the corruption cases against him, had denied all the accusations.