Benjamin Netanyahu looks to form rightwing government after victory

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sought to form a rightwing governing coalition on Thursday after securing victory in a high-stakes Israeli election despite a strong challenge from a centrist alliance.

The results from Tuesday’s vote came despite corruption allegations against the 69-year-old premier and kept him on course to become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister later this year.

His close ally President Donald Trump, who has swung US policy sharply in Israel’s favour and openly backed Netanyahu, said the incumbent’s victory for a fifth mandate gives the White House’s long-awaited peace plan a “better chance”.

Netanyahu’s rightwing Likud party looked set to finish with a similar number of seats in parliament to his main rival, ex-military chief Benny Gantz’s centrist Blue and White alliance. But the results showed that Likud together with other rightwing parties allied to the prime minister would hold around 65 seats in the 120-seat parliament.

Gantz conceded defeat on Wednesday night, and final official results were expected to be announced by Friday.

The results leave President Reuven Rivlin, who must ask one of the candidates to form a government, with little choice but to pick Netanyahu. Intensive coalition negotiations could drag on for days or even weeks.

Rivlin said he would begin consultations with party heads next week ahead of making his decision. His office said the consultations would be broadcast live in their entirety for the first time. The close race between the two main parties had led to uncertainty after polls closed Tuesday night and exit surveys were released.

Both Netanyahu and Gantz claimed victory after the initial exit polls.

“We respect the decision of the people,” Gantz told journalists on Wednesday night, acknowledging he had failed to unseat the prime minister.

Former finance minister Yair Lapid, who co-led the Blue and White alliance, vowed to “make life bitter for the Netanyahu government”.