Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett will announce tonight that they’re forming a joint party ahead of Israel’s upcoming elections. Here’s what it means. 1/8
They’ve governed together before. The Bennett-Lapid coalition was the only government in over a decade to push Netanyahu from office. 2/8
The logic is straightforward. Lapid has been bleeding support in the polls. Bennett polls well personally but has almost no party infrastructure. 3/8
Yesh Atid has by far the best ground operation in the opposition. That’s what Bennett has been missing. It's a win-win. 4/8
The bigger story is Bennett’s continued evolution. The former Yamina leader and Yesha Council director is now formally aligned with a centrist liberal party. Hard to remember he once ran the settlement movement. 5/8
Watch what this does to Gantz and Eisenkot. A consolidated Bennett-Lapid bloc squeezes the same centrist-security lane they’ve been trying to occupy. The pressure now is to merge or risk getting crowded out. Gantz has been under the threshold in polls for months. 6/8
Lieberman is a different case — secular-right, Russian-speaking base, the anti-Haredi vote. But the math still tightens around him. A bigger Bennett-Lapid party means a smaller pie for everyone else in the opposition. 7/8
Open question on the right: does formally merging with Lapid cost Bennett the soft-right voters who were willing to back him personally but won’t touch Yesh Atid? That’s the bet he’s making. Worth it for the ground game, but not without risk. 8/8
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For years far-right Israeli politician Itamar Ben-Gvir was considered to be beyond the pale. Today, he is expected to be the surprise of #Israelex22, a potential kingmaker and a likely minister in a Netanyahu gov't. Here are 5 signature Ben-Gvir moments worth checking out.
1/ 2015 - Ben-Gvir (in white) leads a group of settlers in Hebron, harassing an Arab shopkeeper and telling them to go back to Syria. Once a fight breaks out, Ben-Gvir bravely takes out a clothing rack (0:20). Impressive, I guess, considering he did not serve in the IDF.
2/ 1995 - Back in the 90s, during the Oslo process Ben-Gvir steals the symbol off Prime Minister Rabin's car and says, "Just like we got to this symbol, we can get to Rabin." PM Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated by a right-wing extremist later that year.
🗳️ THREAD: In a few hours the first polls will be released after Netanyahu's indictment announcement by AG Avichai Mandelblit. Here are three things to be on the lookout for:
BLOCS OVER PARTIES. Expect Gantz-Lapid's Kachol Lavan lead to grow over Netanyahu's Likud but what is more indicative is where the votes that leave Netanyahu are going. In short, pay more attention to movement between the right blocs and center-left.
DO LIKUD VOTERS GO RIGHT? If the Likud drop by a few seats but they all stay in the right bloc (New Right, Right Wing Unity List, Liberman) this is good news for Netanyahu, he can likely grab those votes back like he did in 2015 and his path to a far-right coalition stays intact.