Israel president to start consultations on next PM this weekend

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin will begin holding meetings with the parties elected to parliament on Sunday, asking each of them who should be the next prime minister.
2 min read
19 September, 2019
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Reuven Rivlin and Benny Gantz shake hands [AFP/Getty]

Israeli President Reuven Rivlin will begin consultations on Sunday to decide who should form the next government following this week's general elections, a statement from his office said.

Rivlin will hold meetings with the parties elected to parliament and ask them for their recommendations on who should be the next prime minister. 

He will then make his choice based on those recommendations, in consultations expected to last a couple days.

Rivlin's announcement on Thursday came as reported election results showed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his main opponent Benny Gantz deadlocked.

Official results have not been announced, but Israeli media have said Gantz's centrist Blue and White has 33 parliamentary seats and Netanyahu's right-wing Likud 31 out of 120, with 97 percent of the votes counted.

Despite Gantz's slim lead, neither has an obvious path to form a majority coalition.

Both Netanyahu and Gantz have called for a unity government following Tuesday's vote, but the Blue and White leader has insisted that he lead it.

Netanyahu, who faces possible corruption charges in the weeks ahead, has so far shown no sign that he would be willing to accept an end to his tenure as Israel's longest-serving prime minister.

Earlier in the day, Rivlin welcomed Netanyahu's decision to join calls for a unity government.

"I hear, loud and clear, the voices calling for a broad and stable national unity government," he said.

"And I congratulate you, Mr. prime minister, on joining that call this morning."

Netanyahu said Thursday he was dissapointed Gantz refused to meet with him, Haaretz reported.

The premier had called for a unity government and said he was ready to meet at "any hour" with his opponent.

"Gantz, my offer to meet still stands," he said in response to the rejection. "This is what the public expects of us."

The mainly Palestinian Joint List alliance was set to become the third-largest force in parliament with 12 seats, according to Israeli media reports.

Comment: Palestinian hopes don't lie in Israel's election, but in America 2020


That could put the Palestinian-Israeli parties in position to block Netanyahu from continuing as prime minister if they decide to break with precedent and endorse Gantz for the job.

Netanyahu has cancelled his planned visit to the United Nations General Assembly next week due to the "political context in the country".

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