Israel MPs gather to clear way for snap election

AFP , Monday 15 Oct 2012

Israeli Knesset members are expected to approve a government bill proposed by PM Benjamin Netanyahu in a bid to pave the way for early elections by January 2013

Israel
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, center, chairs the weekly cabinet meeting in his Jerusalem offices, Sunday, Oct. 14, 2012 (Photo: AP)

The Israeli parliament was in session on Monday to vote on a motion to dissolve itself and clear the way for a snap election, likely to be set for January 22.

At the session, which began at 1400 GMT, MPs were expected to approve a government bill to dissolve the parliament, or Knesset, paving the way for early elections which were called last week by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. "I'm asking to hold elections on Tuesday, January 22, 2013," Netanyahu told the house at the start of the debate.

"In less than 100 days the people of Israel will decide who will lead them in the face of the greatest security challenges which we have known since the founding of the state; who will lead them in the face of the toughest economic crisis the world has known in the past 80 years," he said.

President Shimon Peres also made reference to the threat posed by Iran's nuclear programme, which Israel and much of the West believes is an attempt to build a weapons capability, despite Tehran's denials. "We stand in the face of Iran's attempts to acquire a nuclear weapon," he said.

MPs will debate the bill and vote on it in three readings in a lengthy session expected to run late into the night, said Yariv Levin, chairman of the Knesset's House Committee. "We will use an accelerated procedure which will let us vote on the bill in three readings in one day," he told public radio.

To be adopted, the text must be approved by an absolute majority of 61 in the 120-seat Knesset, a parliamentary spokesman said. Commentators say the bill is likely to be easily approved.

On approval, the Knesset will be immediately dissolved and an election recess will come into force, marking the official start of a campaign which polls suggest Netanyahu and his rightwing and ultra-Orthodox allies will comfortably win.

A survey published last week by the left-leaning Haaretz newspaper found that Netanyahu and his allies were set to increase their number of seats to 68, while the opposition -- comprising centrist, leftwing and Arab parties -- would win just 52.

Netanyahu's existing coalition, which includes the centrist Independence party headed by Defence Minister Ehud Barak, holds 66 seats.

The Israeli leader said his decision to call a snap election was driven by the deadlock among coalition partners over the passage of a budget packed with austerity measures.

But commentators said Netanyahu had called an early vote to capitalise on his current standing in the polls, which show him holding a commanding lead over any potential rivals for the premiership.

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