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This Article is From May 15, 2015

Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu Finalises Cabinet Lineup for Vote

Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu Finalises Cabinet Lineup for Vote
File Photo of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. (Agence France-Presse)
Jerusalem: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was on Thursday presenting his proposed government for the approval of parliament, where his coalition commands a razor-thin majority.

Netanyahu's new administration marks a shift to the right by giving increased prominence to Naftali Bennett's far-right Jewish Home, which opposes a Palestinian state and strongly backs settlement activity.

The move looks likely to complicate Israel's already damaged relationship with the Palestinians and further strain ties with the international community.

After two months of coalition horsetrading, Thursday's session was delayed for another two hours to give Netanyahu more time to placate senior members of his party who were dissatisfied by the portfolios they received.

"We will safeguard our security and strive for peace," Netanyahu said in a speech that was interrupted by loud laughter from the opposition and heckling from Arab Israeli lawmakers, three of whom were ejected.

Netanyahu stressed the need to change the system of governance to increase Israel's political stability and implied he would seek to expand his narrow coalition.

But opposition head Issac Herzog firmly rejected any notion of joining Netanyahu's government.

"No decent leader would join this circus that you've formed at the last moment with barely a majority for the sole purpose of perpetuating your regime," Herzog said.

"Your way is not my way."

Netanyahu's lineup is dominated by rightwing and religious parties and commands a slender majority of 61 of the parliament's 120 seats, with commentators warning it was vulnerable to the slightest head cold or whim of a disgruntled MP.

The five-party alliance was built over weeks of intensive negotiations which saw him forced to hand out senior ministerial portfolios to coalition partners in a move which has fostered resentment in his own Likud party.

'No Palestinian state'

On the eve of the March 17 election, Netanyahu promised there would be no Palestinian state on his watch, in remarks which triggered a diplomatic backlash.

Although he has since sought to backtrack, reviving the peace process is unlikely to be a priority for his new cabinet, which features several ministers bent on expanding settlement construction on land that the Palestinians want for a future state.

Ahead of the parliamentary vote, the allocation of portfolios among Likud members was beginning to take shape.

Defence Minister Moshe Yaalon was to keep his portfolio, as was Yisrael Katz, who has served as transportation minister since Likud won the 2009 election.

Katz would also receive the intelligence portfolio, which was formerly held by Yuval Steinitz, who would become energy minister and also continue to coordinate Israel's position on Iran and its nuclear programme.

Netanyahu confidant Ofir Akunis will be a junior minister in the ministry of communications, which will be headed by the prime minister himself, a party spokesman said.

Outspoken Miri Regev was named culture and sports minister, and hardliner Danny Danon, who was fired as deputy defence minister during the summer war with Gaza militants, received the science, technology and space portfolio.

Yariv Levin was named tourism minister as well as internal security minister, with his responsibilities including coordination between the government and the Knesset.

Zeev Elkin was appointed immigrant absorption and strategic threats
minister.

And Gila Gamliel was named minister of pensioner affairs.

PM keeping several portfolios

Haim Katz was named welfare minister, and Tzipi Hotovely was appointed deputy foreign minister, with Netanyahu keeping the portfolio for himself and Hotovely, who has called to annex the West Bank and make Palestinians Israeli citizens.

Druze Likud lawmaker Ayoub Kara, who was briefly hospitalised earlier Thursday, told media he was to be deputy regional cooperation minister, with Netanyahu formally heading the ministry.

Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein meanwhile paved the way for Arye Deri, head of the ultra-Orthodox Shas party, to be appointed economy minister.

Deri was imprisoned in 2000 for two years for corruption and breach of trust, felonies he committed when he was interior minister.

The coalition groups Likud, which won 30 seats in the election, with the centre-right Kulanu (10 seats), Jewish Home (eight) and the two ultra-Orthodox parties, Shas (seven) and United Torah Judaism (six).

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