Challenges mounting for Israeli prime minister

JERUSALEM-Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party will hold a leadership vote, a challenger said on Sunday, as pressure mounted on the veteran leader to step aside after his indictment on corruption charges.
Israeli media reported the Likud primary would be held in six weeks. A party spokesman could not be reached to confirm the timeline.
Gideon Saar, a Likud lawmaker who has challenged Netanyahu, wrote on Twitter that he "welcomes the prime minister's agreement to hold primaries for party leadership".
Netanyahu's indictment last Thursday came amid political disarray in Israel, after neither Netanyahu nor his main challenger in the general election, centrist Benny Gantz, secured a majority in parliament in April and September polls.
Netanyahu has denied the charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust and said he would stay in office and defend himself.
The four-term conservative leader projected business as usual on Sunday, touring the country's northern frontier and ramping up rhetoric about Iranian threats.
Israel's Supreme Court dismissed on Sunday a petition by a watchdog group to force Netanyahu to step aside.
The Movement for Quality Government in Israel had said in its court filing that the first criminal charges against a sitting prime minister constituted "the crossing of a red line and a grave blow to public trust in ruling institutions".
The court dismissed the petition to force Netanyahu to resign or temporarily recuse himself from office. It said the watchdog had not yet exhausted other avenues, such as petitioning Netanyahu directly and Israel's attorney-general.
For his part, Netanyahu kept focus on security and toured the Golan Heights with top military brass.
"I am doing everything needed to carry out government work, Cabinet work,… in all necessary ways, to ensure the security of the citizens of Israel and the things that are crucial for Israel," he said.
But Israeli news coverage remained focused on the political challenge. Commentators said other court petitions could follow.
Gantz's mandate to form a government-after an unsuccessful attempt by Netanyahu to do so-expired on Nov 20. The next day, Israel's president declared a three-week period in which lawmakers can nominate one of their own to try to put together a ruling coalition.
Should that fail, a new election-Israel's third in a year-will be triggered.
Netanyahu's hope of securing that parliamentary nomination was challenged by Saar.
"There is only one way in which we can save the country, extricate it from the crisis and ensure the Likud's continued rule-and that is if we go to snap primaries today, within these 21 days," Saar told Israel's Channel 12 television.

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