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Opinion | Hold us tight, in the chairs Israel today

2022-02-05T21:32:04.339Z


Get a spoiler: Meretz is not going anywhere, it will not dismantle the government • How do you say in the neighborhood? "Threats like sand and nothing to eat"


Anyone who listened to the tremendous attack by Meretz members on the government last week might have thought we were a minute before the explosion and going to the polls.

Meretz officials were furious at the approval given by the ombudsman to train construction in Eviatar, Musi Raz said he did not think he could swallow such a frog, because "this is one too many," Gabi Lasky said that "whoever wants to train Eviatar actually wants to dismantle the government." And Minister Issawi Farage said his cabinet members "show us the way out of government".

Get a spoiler: Meretz is not going anywhere.

It will not dismantle the government.

How do you say in the neighborhood?

"Threats like sand and nothing to eat."

Meretz is forced to give up its ideology, and not only it.

Bennett gives up his opposition to the establishment of the submarine committee, Shaked is having a hard time passing the Citizenship Law, Saar and Elkin, who have pledged to help the young settlement, are unaffected due to the opposition of Lapid and the left wing.

Meretz and Labor need to do "hold me", but can do nothing.

Meanwhile, the only party that stands on its own is the RAAM, which attributes to it the cessation of planting in the south. It taught the coalition a lesson in issuing ultimatums, when it passed the Electricity Act.

No one will dismantle the government, and the reason is clear: no partnership awaits a better chance in the election.

Parts of the coalition, sponsored by caressing media, manage to do what they please.

Assaulting her as a spokeswoman provoking questions and firing laws against Netanyahu, Lieberman occupies the prime minister's treasury, and Lapid marches safely to the prime minister's office despite a breach of wholesale promises from the election period.

Now the government is stable, the members are holding on to the chair.

But the key word is: for now.

Politics in Israel is dangerous, and in the 61st government even more so.

One out-of-control explosion could develop into a rolling snowball that could within a few months bring the government to an end.

Were we wrong?

Fixed!

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Source: israelhayom

All news articles on 2022-02-05

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