Israel in turmoil as rifts between major political parties deepen 35

Israel in turmoil as rifts between major political parties deepen

The political deadlocks in Occupied Palestine [Israel] have aggravated a leadership crisis that broke out into the open when all major Israeli parties declared that they won’t accept a coalition government led by the beleaguered Prime Minister Netanyahu.
The seemingly endless political turmoil in Israel has overshadowed the regime’s political and economic vitality. Frustrated and embarrassed, by the political theatre, many naïve Israelis are disillusioned with the idea that the March 23 parliamentary election would end the socio-economic nightmare they live in.
We know that deception and chicanery are the main characteristics of Zionist politicians, but the Israeli political class is also exhausted by the current predicament of the past few elections.
With the yet greater political dead-end looming on the horizon, the Zionist regime cannot break its vicious cycle because almost all of the candidates running for the upcoming election are the very same corrupt characters who fail to reach an agreement on forming a unity government to deal with ongoing economic woes.
It seems that Bibi will fail this time too to elicit enough support through nationalist and racist demagogy, as Ultra- Jewish conservatives, the leaders of the Haredi parties, Moshe Gafni and Ya’acov Litzman of United Torah Judaism, and Arye Deri of Shas, seek tougher anti-Arab measures and won’t accept to form a coalition government, under Bibi’s leadership, with the Lapid’s Yesh Atid leftist party.
In the meantime, Yisrael Beytenu’s Avigdor Liberman called on Bennett, Sa’ar and Lapid to sign an oath with him that none of them would ever join a Netanyahu government, again a move that closes doors and could lead to yet another unsettled election.
Being in a state of constant crisis, Israel will probably turn into another Greece as political instability remained out of reach due to continuing discord among the key parties in the Knesset.


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