Examining Israel's efforts toward building a new government

Prime Minister-designate Tzipi Livni has received a two-week deadline extension for forming a ruling coalition. Here are answers to some key questions on how the process might play out.

Reporting from Jerusalem — Israeli Prime Minister-designate Tzipi Livni has asked for and received a two-week extension on her original four-week deadline to form a new governing coalition.

With nearly a month of Jewish holidays ending Wednesday, the negotiations to bring other political parties on board should heat up fast. Here's a primer on the proceedings.

---

So what's the real deadline?

Nov. 3, with no further extensions. Livni, who narrowly won the Kadima Party leadership a month ago, has until then to assemble a government that will gain 61 votes of approval in the 120-member Israeli parliament, known as the Knesset.

.

What happens if Livni fails?

President Shimon Peres could assign another Knesset member the task of forming the government. That new prime minister-designate would have another month, plus the two-week extension if necessary. But Peres could instead opt to abandon the effort and call new national elections. Within Kadima, a Livni failure could spark a challenge to her party leadership.

.

Any surprises so far?

Not really. Livni had been expected to take more than a month, and her alliance with Labor Party leader and Defense Minister Ehud Barak was also no surprise. The main questions center on which parties they will persuade to fill out the coalition. Together, Labor and Kadima currently hold 48 seats.

.

What other parties are likely to join?

The ultra-orthodox Shas party leads the pack with 12 seats, followed by United Torah Judaism, with six seats, and the five-seat leftist Meretz party. Shas is accustomed to playing the kingmaker role, able to create or topple governing coalitions. It demands millions of dollars in welfare payments that favor larger, ultra-Orthodox families and a government pledge not to negotiate over dividing Jerusalem.

.

Why is Shas so important?

In addition to the number of seats it holds, Shas' involvement could be crucial to the public perception that Livni's government is socially and politically inclusive. The right-wing party's supporters are generally poorer and of non-European descent, in contrast to the Ashkenazi (European) social and political elite that the Labor and Kadima leaderships both represent. Politically, many Israelis would regard Shas as a necessary brake on Livni's ability to make too many concessions in peace talks with the Palestinians.


<< Previous Page | Next Page >>
 
 
World