Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Natanyahu's opponent officially conceded defeat


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after seeing exit-poll figures in Israel's parliamentary elections late Tuesday in Tel Aviv.
Center-left challenger Isaac Herzog conceded defeat on Wednesday in Israel's general election and said he had congratulated right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on his win. 
"A few minutes ago, I spoke with the prime minister and I congratulated him on his achievement and wished him good luck," Herzog said, speaking to Israeli television and radio stations outside his house. 

Netanyahu hopes to form a new government within weeks after defying the polls to seal a clear election win, his right-wing Likud party said Wednesday.
"The prime minister intends to begin forming the government immediately in order to finish the task within two to three weeks," a party statement said.
It said Netanyahu had already spoken overnight with the leaders of smaller parties he saw as likely coalition partners.
It was referring to the leaders of the far-right Jewish Home party, the hardline Yisrael Beitenu, and the two ultra-Orthodox parties, Shas and United Torah Judaism.
With nearly all the votes counted, Likud won 23.26% of the vote to 18.73% for its center-left rival, Zionist Union, giving them 30 and 24 seats respectively.
The Joint List, which groups the main Arab parties, followed with 10.98%, which equates to 14 seats, meaning it will be the third-largest force in the 120-seat Knesset, or parliament.
Jewish Home won eight seats, Yisrael Beitenu six, Shas seven, and UTJ six, meaning that, with Likud, the right-wing-religious bloc looks to have secured 57 seats.

Credit: AFP

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