Netanyahu’s alliance faces dominance issues as key partners leave – Country

Israel’s Super Orthodox Party, a key partner to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said earlier Tuesday that it was leaving the coalition government and threatening to undermine the rule of Israeli leaders in a critical period in the Gaza conflict.
Two factions of Moses Judaism in Manchester United say they are surrounding the government’s divisions around a bill that would provide extensive military draft exemptions to their voters, many of whom studied Jewish texts rather than enlisting. The problem has long been divided into Jewish Israelites, most of whom are required to enlist, and this rift has only expanded since the conflict in Gaza began and demanded military manpower growth.
“The government has repeatedly violated its commitment to ensure the status of students in Jewish seminaries,” Degel Hatorah Faction said in a statement: “Its MPs announced that “they resigned from the coalition and the government.” ”
The departure of a party that has long served as Israeli political king did not immediately threaten Netanyahu’s rule. But once effective within 48 hours, this will give Israeli leaders a majority in government and can now rely more on the whimsical aspects of the two far-right parties. These parties opposed concessions to the ceasefire negotiations with Hamas and resigned or threatened to withdraw from the government to end or even suspend the conflict in Gaza.

Political restructuring emerged when Israel and Hamas were discussing the armistice clauses of the 21-month conflict in Gaza. Despite the pressure from the United States, Israel’s top allies, and mediators Egypt and Qatar, there is no breakthrough in the negotiations. A recurring key point is whether the conflict ends as part of any truce, with Netanyahu’s far-right alliance allies opposing the end of the conflict, while Hamas remains intact.
Manchester United’s Law Judaism’s departure has a 48-hour window before formal, meaning Netanyahu can still find ways to satisfy the party and bring it back to the coalition. But Shuki Friedman, vice president of the Jewish Policy Institute, said the gap between the current draft law on the table and the party’s demands is still wide, which makes the compromises during that time.

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Friedman said the party’s departure did not immediately make Netanyahu’s rule at risk. One vote to dissolve the parliament, which would lower the government and trigger new elections until the end of the year due to procedural reasons, and the opposition could not be held. Starting later this month until October, a summer parliamentary recession has led Netanyahu to try again to bridge the gap and bring the parties back to the coalition.
Miki Zohar, cabinet minister of Netanyahu’s Likud party, said he hopes the party can coax back into the coalition. He said, “God will, everything will be fine.”
A Likud spokesperson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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