"There’s only one scenario in which we don’t go to fifth elections, and that’s if Bennett has a lot of seats"
But Bennett’s plans to challenge Binyamin Netanyahu for the country’s leadership were thrown into disarray by the emergence of Gideon Saar as a rival. Bennett and Saar have now spent months battling over the same pool of center-right voters.
In a candid conversation just two weeks before the polls open, Bennett outlines a new strategy. He’s no longer battling for the centrist “anyone but Bibi” camp, now dominated by Gideon Saar. Instead, he’s fighting a double battle: to win votes on the right, and to create a public perception that he’s Netanyahu’s successor for the leadership of the right.
But while he plots his takeover of the prime minister’s office, Bennett recognizes a bleak truth. A right-wing government made up of Bennett, Bezalel Smotrich, and the chareidim isn’t Netanyahu’s only option. The other option is to just entrench himself in Balfour Street and drag the country to fifth elections.
“I’m glad to be the kingmaker, but the king I’m going to crown is the Israeli public. For many years, young Israelis, especially, have felt that they’re constantly climbing the ladder and never making progress. They climb and climb, only to stay in the same place. This was true, first and foremost, with the economy — even before Covid, the situation was out of control. Many worked full-time jobs and couldn’t pay the bills. Many would never have a chance, no matter how hard they worked, to buy their own house. The Negev, over 12 years of Netanyahu’s rule, has been lost to the Bedouins, with widespread armed robberies and breaches of army bases. Housing prices have skyrocketed, and there’s a lot of hatred between different sectors. We need to take Israel out of the mud and charge forward.”
“I’ll say it as clearly as possible — this can happen only from the right. I’m telling you clearly, Netanyahu can only be replaced from the right. I won’t lend a hand to a left-wing prime minister.”
“I won’t enthrone Lapid as prime minister. Sadly, we’ve been through four election campaigns — and it doesn’t even have to do with corona. After 32 years in politics, Netanyahu can’t form a stable government, and that’s why the time has come to replace him, but only from the right. I’ll be clear: Yamina will not sit in a left-wing government led by Lapid as prime minister.”
“Getting along where? I was recently in Sderot in a factory that manufactures fuses for shells. They’ve laid off 20 employees. Because there’s no budget, the Defense Ministry can’t fund them. We’re talking about people’s lives here, their bread and butter, and we have a government that closed its ears and couldn’t care less. My drive, my goal, is to make sure my people have bread, livelihoods, and self-respect. It’s terrible, we need to snap out of it. After 32 years, we’ll say thank you, Bibi, and vote Bennett.”
“The vaccine drive is wonderful. But when you’re bringing in vaccines with one hand and mutations with the other, it’s a terrific waste. Israel, by the way, isn’t the worst in the world in terms of the coronavirus, but we’re pretty mediocre. When it comes to the number of dead as a percentage of the population, we’re in the upper quartile of the world. In the number of days spent in lockdown, we’re number one. The number of days of school closed — we’re number one. It’s true that after a year of stumbles, we did get the vaccines, but everything else was a failure.”
“Friends, until now, I never declared myself a candidate for prime minister, because that’s exactly what my thinking was. I agreed with that, and since entering politics, I’ve recommended Netanyahu to form a government every time. Over the past year, a string of events have led me to the conclusion that something here is rotten. It started with Netanyahu deciding to throw us to the opposition — he used us and discarded us. That pained us a lot.”
“On the contrary, that shows lack of loyalty to the right-wing camp as a whole, which we remained loyal to. But it all goes back to the fact that earlier, as defense minister, I presented a very organized plan on how to manage the coronavirus, and there was a sense that it wasn’t being implemented because of ego and battles over credit. I have a lot of respect for Netanyahu, we need to give him a genuine thank you, but there’s something very unhealthy in the belief that has been fostered in many people that Israel can’t survive without Netanyahu.
“I’ll start at the end. I want to help all the citizens of Israel. I want to help the chareidi community concretely in their daily lives, education, economy, parnassah…”
“No, housing too, of course. We devoted an entire section in our plan to that. I want a chareidi to be able to go where he wants in this country and be accepted as he is. The alliance with Lapid in 2013 came as a result of Netanyahu’s decision to exclude us from the government, and you remember that well. We actually turned to the chareidi parties first, but they couldn’t help us.”
“Couldn’t or wouldn’t, that was their decision. Signing an agreement has consequences, maybe they were afraid of being left out of the government. I can’t analyze that.”
“First of all, it’s true I was a newcomer then, but this time around, eight months ago, do you know what my demand was? I wanted to be health minister, which is considered one of the less attractive portfolios. I wanted to do it so I could help save lives. I think if I had gotten the position, the entire year would have looked different, with many fewer deaths…”
“Wait a minute, that’s why I went to Lapid, to force my way into the government. This time too, when Netanyahu discarded us, the chareidim didn’t go to the mat for us. But that’s their right. I look at the chareidi community and I want it to integrate…”
“Of course not.”
“I’ll always do what I can to secure the political influence I need to do what’s necessary for Am Yisrael. I would have thought that after that, Netanyahu and the chareidi parties wouldn’t have gone and broken up the right-wing bloc as they did this past year. The chareidim knew what that meant.”
“Look, I’m the first politician who came to the chareidi community’s defense — not just with words, I visited Bnei Brak three times, at a time when no chareidi politician thought to drop by. I went to Elad, I went to Beitar Illit, and I was the first. I didn’t just visit, either, I acted. As defense minister and Knesset member. I came and brought the paratrooper brigade and the commandos, and we saw some of the most beautiful pictures in the history of the country. We saw soldiers being greeted with affection by the chareidi community. So my commitment to the chareidi community isn’t something I need to prove.”
“I see things differently. You know who’s angriest at me right now? Lapid and Lieberman. They say I give in to the chareidim. I say, my friends, let’s let go of all this nonsense. Let’s solve the problems. But we have to understand that the chareidi community is a wonderful community.”
“I’ll choose whoever’s willing to put hatred aside. It’s no coincidence that we’re the only party that isn’t banning anyone. I don’t ban anyone and I’m not going to say now that I’ll sit with this one and not with that one.”
“Of course not! I won’t lend a hand to anyone being banned.”
“No.”
“In one sentence? Look, it comes down to counting seats. You’re both experts at that. There’s only one scenario in which we don’t go to fifth elections, and that’s if Bennett has a lot of seats. Run the numbers and you’ll reach the same conclusion.”
Bennett refuses to give numbers, but if we want to keep our feet on the ground, it’s better to make this calculation without him anyway. The elections will be decided on the question of whether Yamina receives more seats than the Arab parties and holds the balance of power between the blocs. This battle won’t be decided only at the top of the field, but at the bottom too. At the end of the day, it comes down to how many and which parties fail to cross the threshold.
But Bennett isn’t going anywhere. He may talk tough now, but in the cold light of day after the elections, no one doubts that he’ll enter the government with Likud and the chareidim. If Netanyahu doesn’t reach 61 seats even with Bennett, though, everything is possible.
(Originally featured in Mishpacha, Issue 852)