To understand the crisis now facing Israel, you first have to understand the dominance of Benjamin Netanyahu over its politics.
Few politicians in democracies have survived as a party leader for as long as Netanyahu, let alone as prime minister. So far, he has been PM – on and off – for over 15 years.
Israeli politics used to be a competition between visions, with the once dominant Labour establishment making way for the upstart Likud in the 1970s. In recent years it has effectively been a contest between those who want Netanyahu as PM and those who don’t. Even out of power he has always been the prism through which governments refracted.
Israel has always been led by unwieldy coalitions, thanks to its proportional representation system. Netanyahu has been the master at assembling them – the key political skill, especially of late
when there have been five elections in four years because the coalitions have kept collapsing.
Although attacked as divisive, Netanyahu has always managed to lure in centrists and keep out the extremists. But this time it’s different. After last year’s government of anti-Netanyahu forces fell apart, the November election threw up the political equivalent of three-dimensional chess. None of the normal coalition combinations would be enough for a parliamentary majority. So Netanyahu turned, for the first time, to the fringe religious and nationalist extremists.
These include the likes of Itamar Ben-Gvir, the minister of national security – a man who reveres Israeli American terrorist Baruch Goldstein, who murdered 29 Palestinians in the 1994 Cave of the Patriarchs massacre in Hebron. Ben-Gvir has a criminal record for supporting a group founded by the racist terrorist Meir Kahane. He has called for a loyalty test for Arab Israelis, with those who refuse to be expelled. Or there is Bezalel Smotrich, the minister of finance, who said in October 2021 that “it’s a mistake that Ben-Gurion didn’t finish the job and didn’t throw you [Israeli Arabs] out in 1948”. He has also stated that gay pride parades are “worse than bestiality”.