Tel Aviv, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has cancelled his UN General Assembly appearance following the inconclusive election results. He was to have addressed the world body, and meet US President Donald Trump.
Netanyahu and his main challenger Benny Gantz were deadlocked on Wednesday after a general election, raising the possibility of a unity government or even the end of the Netanyahu’s long rule.
Various Israeli media outlets reported that Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud had 31 seats, while Gantz’s Blue and White took 32 out of a total 120 seats.
With more than 90 per cent of the vote counted, Gantz’s slim lead gave no obvious path for either party to form a majority coalition.
With Netanyahu likely to be in the thick of coalition negotiations, it would be the first time in nine years that he will not address the UNGA. Foreign Minister Israel Katz will do so instead.
According to the UN schedule, Netanyahu was listed as the 12th speaker on September 26, the third and final day of speeches by world leaders. He was scheduled to come to the podium to speak just three slots after Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, the Jerusalem Post reported.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu is pushing for the Blue and White party to join a national-unity government led by him, sources close to Netanyahu said on Wednesday, as the results of Israel’s repeat election failed to decide a clear winner.
Netanyahu’s right-wing Likud party was projected to win 31 of 120 parliamentary seats while the center-left Blue and White Party was projected to win 32 seats, with results from 63 per cent of eligible voters coming in. The country’s voter turnout was 69.4 per cent.
The results so far showed Likud and its allies holding a total of 55 seats while Blue and White and its allies held a total of 56 seats.
“Prime Minister Netanyahu does not rule out any Zionist party,” Likud said in an official statement.
The results of Tuesday’s race, pending the uncounted votes of IDF soldiers and diplomats, gave Blue and White 33 seats, the Likud 32, the Joint List 12, Shas nine, Yisrael Beytenu eight, United Torah Judaism eight, Yamina seven, Labor-Gesher six and the Democratic Union five. The centre-right and centre-left blocs both won 56 seats.
President Reuven Rivlin will begin consultations on Sunday regarding whom he should appoint to form a government. But he will already see both Netanyahu and Gantz at Thursday’s memorial ceremony for former president Shimon Peres.