The formation of the government in the Zionist regime is one of the most detrimental challenges that Israel has faced since its inception.
On April 23, for the fourth time in the past two years, Israeli parliamentary election was held across the Occupied Palestinian territories. The final results clearly showed that the incumbent Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and despite his usual empty rhetoric, failed abjectly to gain a sufficient majority to form a new government, leading to a parliamentary impasse– which resembles plot points for a dark television satire titled “Apocalypse As Usual”.
Netanyahu’s party won only 52 out of 120 seats in the Knesset, whereas his opposition obtained 56 seats, which indicates that neither of them will be able to form the cabinet.
Amid the political imbroglio and escalating street violence, more Israeli experts began to predict the ultimate dismantling of the political structure. Today, many Israelis, at times, appear to fear that the only”Jewish state in the world” that had occupied Palestine in 1948 is about to be overthrown.
The parliamentary crisis in Israel is only one of the many challenges that the Zionist regime is facing. It should be said that Israel has been enmeshed in perpetual political and socioeconomic upheavals since 2006. Today, the hapless Israelis are being ruled by a dishonest political class which is the epitome of
The exacerbating economic crisis in Israel, as well as the mismanagement of Netanyahu and his corrupt clique in the fight against the Corona epidemic, constitute the key factors that galvanize the weekly demonstrations in Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities.
In addition to the domestic crises, the international campaign against the Zionist regime and the formation of the BDS movement, whose worldwide activities have unveiled the continuing Israeli genocide of Palestinians, are considered to be Israeli’s international calamity.
If we seek to prognosticate Israel’s future, we must say that Tel Aviv will certainly face extremely difficult days and years. The issue of elections and lack of consensus among the Israeli parties can lead to a parliamentary fifth, indeed a political and social catastrophe for Israel.
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