Netanyahu, asked to form government, calls for broad national unity coalition
Published February 3, 2013
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for the formation of a broad national unity coalition, after being tasked with forming the new government.
“Last night, I called upon the Knesset factions to join me in as broad a national unity government as possible that would unite the public at a decisive time in our history. The supreme mission that a national unity government will face is stopping Iran from arming itself with nuclear weapons,” Netanyahu said Sunday at the beginning of the regular Cabinet meeting.
Netanyahu outlined three more tasks that he said the new government must address in its first year, including enacting a “responsible” budget, assigning more equitably in sharing the burden of Israeli military service, and moving forward in the diplomatic process with the Palestinians.
Parties representing 82 members of the new 120-seat government recommended that Netanyahu be tasked with forming the next government, Peres said Saturday night during the ceremony in which he officially asked Netanyahu to proceed with negotiations to form a government coalition.
At Saturday night’s ceremony, Netanyahu addressed the parties that did not recommend him to form the next government. “I call upon those who said they would not sit in the government to reconsider and to come and find common ground. I call upon all sections of society and all the parties, including those who didn’t recommend me, to join a responsible national unity government which will be as wide as possible. A government which will ensure the security, the unity and the future of the State of Israel,” Netanyahu said.
Netanyahu’s coalition negotiators were scheduled to meet Sunday with top vote-getting parties Yesh Atid, Habayit Hayehudi and Shas, and to meet on Monday with the United Torah Judaism, Hatnuah and Kadima parties.
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