WORLD> Middle East
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Coalition talks flop, push Israel toward election
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-10-25 14:57 JERUSALEM -- Israel stepped closer to an early election on Friday when a Jewish religious party refused to join a new coalition under Tzipi Livni, the designated successor to scandal-hit outgoing Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.
Unless reversed, the decision of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, a linchpin of successive governments, could kill off already dwindling hopes of a peace deal with Palestinians this year by leaving Israel under caretaker leadership for months. Shas said its word was final, and its refusal to consider dividing Jerusalem for the sake of a peace deal lay at the heart of it. But Shas was also seeking an increase in the budget for welfare, which Livni's centrist Kadima party rejected. "Shas made its decision based on its principles. If our demands had been met, we would have been in. They were not met, and we cannot join," said Shas chairman Eli Yishai. "Shas cannot be bought and Shas will not sell out on Jerusalem." A Livni ally cautioned there was still time for a coalition deal to be forged, and Livni had 48 hours to negotiate before the expiry of her self-imposed Sunday evening deadline. "I don't think we've failed. It's not over until it's over," Yoel Hasson, a Kadima lawmaker, said. He added that efforts to establish a coalition would continue through Sunday and if they failed, "we will go for an election, and win it." Gidon Saar of the right-wing opposition Likud, which is riding high in the polls and favours an election, accused Livni of "still trying to tempt all sorts of party fragments and to form some sort of clumsy government." Livni Silent There was no reaction from Livni herself, who is not likely to give up easily on her quest to be confirmed as Israel's first woman leader since Golda Meir in the 1970s. Israeli television stations said Livni could muster a slim majority of 63, on the basis of talks she has held with two left-wing parties, Labour and Meretz, a pensioners party and members of another religious party called United Torah Judaism. Some analysts think she may also be able to rely on the support of smaller parties outside government, including Arab politicians. Kadima and Labour, headed by Defence Minister Ehud Barak, favour pursuing peace talks with the Palestinians and insist now is not the time to burden Israel with elections, more so in view of the mounting world economic crisis. Olmert, who resigned last month over corruption inquiries, formally remains premier, but without the political authority to sign a historic pact with the Palestinians as President George W. Bush desires before he leaves the White House in January. Livni and Barak would press on with talks, launched a year ago, in search of an accord to establish a Palestinian state alongside Israel. Likud, by contrast, has condemned Olmert's peace moves and on Friday suggested that Livni would sacrifice Jerusalem. Both Israel and the Palestinians claim the city as their capital. Olmert is ready to discuss giving parts of the city seized in the 1967 war back to the Arabs. Livni has been trying to forge partnerships since she was elected leader of Kadima in mid-September. Her overtures for a "grand coalition" of the main parties were quickly rejected by Benjamin Netanyahu, the former prime minister who heads Likud. Hasson, Livni's ally, said Netanyahu had sabotaged the coalition talks by secretly offering Shas a bigger welfare budget for its poor religious supporters than anything Livni has offered. |