Netanyahu may yet make respectable, democratic Israel disappear
‘He’s a magician,’ the crowd chanted as Benjamin Netanyahu took the stage at Likud’s victory party. The man now on course to become Israel’s longest-serving prime minister had, as has become customary, pulled off a seemingly impossible eleventh-hour win. Despite the centre-left coalescing to form Kahol Lavan, an anti-Bibi alliance, Netanyahu held onto the crown by pandering to right-wing voters on territory. In the dying days of the campaign, with polls putting Kahol Lavan on top, Bibi pledged to assert sovereignty over the settlements, a bewitching incantation for Israel’s national-religious sector.