News | Kislev 6, 5770 / November 23, '09 | |
![]() Livni's time is running Israel News Photo:file ![]() Check It Out More ![]() | Published: 10/22/08, 2:14 PM Time Running Out for Livni, Narrow Coalition Unlikelyby Aryeh Haffner (IsraelNN.com) There has been no progress in bringing the Sephardic religious Shas party into the coalition, said aides to Prime Minister-designate Tzipi Livni. They explained that senior Shas leaders implied the party has no reason to lower the level of its demands because Opposition leader and Likud party chairman Binyamin Netanyahu promised them increasing child allowance supplements. Netanyahu has denied it. Pensioners The Pensioners were also not pleased with Kadima's response to their new team of coalition negotiators. The Kadima party Wednesday morning responded sarcastically to the party's appointment of a negotiating team at this late date, with aides telling listeners on IDF Army Radio, "they [the Pensioners party members] apparently fell on their heads." Pensioners chairman Yitzchak Galanti explained why the party only now set up a negotiating team, saying, "If Tzipi Livni does want to go with any government at all, only the support of Gil [the Pensioners party]... is what would bring her to a wider national consensus, a lot more than Shas." Inside Kadima Livni also met with Mofaz Wednesday in an ongoing effort to secure his support after winning the Kadima leadership election by a scant one-percent margin. Aloni: Would Livni Lead? "The government that will rise now, in which Tzipi [Livni] will have to cope with Ehud Barak, who is, in my opinion, the most dangerous man today in the state, in addition to Mofaz… In actuality what he [Barak] tried to dictate was that she will be prime minister de-jure [official] and he will be prime minister de facto. That's what he tried to dictate," commented Aloni. Defense Minister Barak's spokesman Ronen Moshe responded to the criticism by calling Aloni's comments, "delusional" or "delirious." Moshe said "there is no doubt that her old age embarrasses her youth." If Livni fails to form a government in the next 13 days, President Peres will either be forced to hand the task to someone else or call a general election. Polls have repeatedly predicted that a general election would leave Kadima weaker and Likud stronger. The Chill Zone - Funny, Entertaining Videos (Updated daily) © IsraelNN Syndications - This article may not be republished freely. Review what you can publish free of charge and what requires a syndication payment on the Syndications Page.
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