The next parliamentary election in Israel is not due until October 2013, but Netanyahu signaled on Sunday he was considering moving up the ballot.
On Saturday, a former Israeli spymaster branded the
country's leaders as "messianic", in the strongest criticism yet from
a security veteran of threats to launch a pre-emptive war.
But an opinion poll conducted on Sunday night and
published in the popular Yedioth Ahronoth daily showed Netanyahu's right-wing
Likud party winning 30 of 120 parliamentary seats if a poll were held now, up
from the 27 it currently holds.
A slew of commentators, citing cracks in the
governing coalition over formulating a new law that could force ultra-Orthodox
Jews to serve in the conscript military, said Netanyahu may opt to set the
election date as early as August or September.
Such a result would make him the leader of the
largest faction and the likely candidate to form the next government.
According to the poll, Israel's main opposition
Kadima party, currently the largest in parliament, would drop from 28 seats to
11. Kadima, a centrist party, recently replaced its leader, former Foreign
Minister Tzipi Livni, with ex-defence chief Shaul Mofaz.
The survey showed the Labour Party, widely expected
to gain strength from a wave of social protests that swept Israeli cities last
summer, taking 18 seats, a steep rise from its current 8, and becoming the
second largest faction.
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman's party Yisrael
Beitenu, Netanyahu's biggest coalition partner, would capture 13 seats, down
from its current 15, the poll showed. The poll surveyed 500 people and has a
margin of error of 4.5 percent.
In an interview with Yedioth Ahronoth's website,
Ynet, Lieberman described an early election as a done deal. "It's now just
a matter of (setting) dates," he said.
Lieberman has been a leading advocate of imposing
military service on ultra-Orthodox Jews - most Jewish men and women are subject
to the draft at the age of 18 - and requiring Israeli Arabs to perform national
service outside the armed forces.
Ultra-Orthodox parties in the coalition have said
they would fight such a move. The current conscription law expires in August
and the government has to decide the issue soon.
Netanyahu has also been under pressure from
pro-settler coalition partners and some outspoken Likud party members who have
questioned his commitment to Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank,
where Palestinians seek a state.
Netanyahu's government has pledged to evict or raze
numerous settlement outposts put up without official sanction, drawing warnings
from some political allies that his coalition could collapse as a result.
WHY I AM NOT A DISPENSATIONALIST; John Nelson Darby is recognized as the father of dispensationalism later made popular in the United States by Cyrus Scofield's Scofield Reference Bible. Charles Henry Mackintosh, 1820–1896, with his popular style spread Darby's teachings to humbler elements in society and may be regarded as the journalist of the Brethren Movement. CHM popularised Darby more than any other Brethren author. As there was no Christian teaching of a “rapture” before Darby began preaching about it in the 1830s, he is sometimes credited with originating the "secret rapture" theory wherein Christ will suddenly remove His bride, the Church, from this world before the judgments of the tribulation. Dispensationalist beliefs about the fate of the Jews and the re-establishment of the Kingdom of Israel put dispensationalists at the forefront of Christian Zionism, because "God is able to graft them in again," and they believe that in His grace he will do so according to their understanding of Old Testament prophecy. They believe that, while the methodologies of God may change, His purposes to bless Israel will never be forgotten, just as He has shown unmerited favour to the Church, He will do so to a remnant of Israel to fulfill all the promises made to the genetic seed of Abraham. I am not a dispensationalist; it is unbiblical and thoroughly evil.
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