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Despite budget approval, Netanyahu's coalition on shaky ground

Despite getting the 2016 state budget approved, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is preoccupied with plots and deals in order to guarantee his political survival.

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Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (C) sits in the Knesset after he presented his new coalition government following the mid-March general elections, in Jerusalem, May 14, 2015. — REUETRS/Jim Hollander

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has a long-standing tradition. On Sundays, after the weekly Cabinet meeting, he holds a meeting with the heads of the coalition parties for political “maintenance work.” It’s a very small forum, because Netanyahu’s coalition is so narrow, 61 out of 120 Knesset seats. Apart from him, as chairman of the Likud, the forum has just three other party leaders.

On Nov. 22, just three days after the state budget for 2015-2016 passed, the mood at this meeting was decidedly different. There was a sense that the government was entering a new phase. By making it past the budget test, the Netanyahu coalition seemed to have ensured its survival until late 2016 at least. According to most political scenarios raised over the past few months, this should have been when the process of expanding the coalition to include the Zionist Camp began, possibly at the expense of HaBayit HaYehudi. But conditions for this are not yet in place. Netanyahu has made every effort to ensure that forming a unity government remains a viable option ever since he formed his cobbled together coalition, but on Nov. 22 he ostensibly put an end to all the rumors that this was on the horizon. At his weekly meeting of coalition leaders, he assured HaBayit HaYehudi chair Naftali Bennett that he has no plans to drop the party from his coalition.

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