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Netanyahu wins clear victory with all ballots counted: Israeli radio

Netanyahu's Likud Party reportedly has won 30 seats in Israel's Knesset, Isaac Herzog gets 24
There were mixed feelings among Zionist Union supporters after exit polls were announced (MEE/Oren Ziv)

JERUSALEM - Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud Party has won 30 seats in Israel's Knesset, Israeli media reported Wednesday.

The Zionist Union, which is led by Isaac Herzog, came in second position with 24 seats, Israel Public Radio added after counting 100 percent of votes in Israel's Knesset election, which was held on Tuesday.

Millions of Israelis cast their votes in their country's 20th Knesset election on Tuesday to determine Israel's next prime minister and the make-up of its parliament.

The radio said the Joint List, which is made up of four Arab parties, won 13 seats, whereas the Yesh Atid Party, which is led by former finance minister Yair Lapid, won 11 seats.

It added that Kulano party, which is led by former communication minister Moshe Kahlon, won 10 seats and the Jewish Home Party, which is led by former economy minister Naftali Bennett, eight seats.

Shas and United Judaism won seven seats each, the radio said, adding that Yisrael Beiteinu Party won six seats and Meretz four seats.

Polling stations closed down at 10pm local time (8pm GMT) on Tuesday, but the election results are due to be officially announced on Thursday.

Both Netanyahu and Herzog claimed to have won the election, getting ready to form Israel's next government.

Soon after polling stations closed down, preliminary exit poll estimates released by Israeli media showed the electoral race to be too close to call.

The Likud Party was said to have won 28 seats out of Knesset's 120 seats, whereas the Zionist Union was said to have won 27 seats.

But late Tuesday, Netanyahu claimed victory in elections after a late fightback in his bid for a third straight term.

"Against all odds we achieved a great victory for the Likud. We achieved a great victory for the national camp under the leadership of the Likud. We achieved a great victory for our people of Israel!" Netanyahu told cheering supporters at campaign headquarters in Tel Aviv.

"Now we have to build a strong and stable government," he added.

But Herzog insisted he was still in the race to form the next government.

"Everything is open," he told activists in Tel Aviv.

"I intend to make every effort to build a real social government in Israel."

Israel’s beaches and ballot boxes had been abuzz throughout Tuesday as people chose the country’s 20th Knesset, amid frantic last-ditch campaigning by politicians across the board. 

Long queues formed at some ballot boxes as Israelis flocked to cast their vote in an election seen by some as a “referendum on Netanyahu”.

Despite the party atmosphere that prevailed in much of Israel, with many enjoying the sunny weather and the public holiday given over to the election, turnout was high.

By 20:00 local time (18:00 GMT), voter turnout was 72 percent, although this fell short of the 80 percent turnout some had anticipated. 

Israel’s proportional voting system, in which voters select party lists rather than individual members of the Knesset, means that often unstable coalitions dominate the political scene.

As the results broke, joyious scenes were reported at both the Zionist Union and Likud camps. 

Oren Ziv, reporting for MEE from the Zionist Union headquarters said that the mood there seemed victorious.

“This is a victory and means that the situation will improve and we [Zionist Union] will be able to form a government,” Oren Pasternak a field activist from Zionist Union told MEE.

“According to the polls, the Israeli public does not want Netanyahu as a prime minister. We started the campaign with 12 seats in the polls so for us this is a big success. We remain optimistic and have a lot of energy for the rest of the evening.” 

But others felt Netanyahu had edged ahead despite pre-election polls putting him up to four seats behind the Zionist Union.

"When he entered like a meteor into Israeli politics 20 years ago, Netanyahu earned himself the title of a political magician," MEE columnist and Israeli analyst Meron Rapoprt said before the final results. "Over the years, it was said that he lost his touch. Tonight he proved he is far from over. Contrary to all polls, he came first in the exit polls with 27 to 28 seats, leading or equal to the Zionist Camp with 27 seats."
 
"While Netanyahu has still a long way to go till he is able to form a government, one thing seems almost certain - Herzog stands very slim chances, if any at all, to form a government without Netanyahu. At best, Netanyahu will offer him a rotation in the prime minister's office. More probably, he be offer a senior ministerial job, not more," he added. 

Amid uncertainty over the make-up of potential future coalitions, politicians engaged in last-minute plays for votes on the last day of a campaign marked by attacks ads and negative messaging.

Election day coverage was dominated by a row over Netanyahu's last-minute attempts to garner right-wing votes for his ruling Likud party.

Netanyahu, who is seeking a third consecutive term in office after almost nine years in power, and a fourth term in total, posted a video on his Facebook page in which he warned that Arab voters were “coming out in droves”.

“The right-wing government is in danger. We have only you. Get out to vote, bring your friends and family”.

The message, slammed by opponents from the centre-left Zionist Union as “horrendous”, came after polls showed the Prime Minister trailing behind the Zionist Union by as many as four seats.

Netanyahu was later reprimanded by the Central Elections Committee, which regulates the vote, after attempting to give a televised address in the late afternoon.

“Election propaganda” is prohibited on election day, and opposition parties called for an injunction against the broadcast – the Elections Committee acquiesced, banning Israeli media from airing the statement.

Netanyahu hit back at the committee, claiming that every player in the election had issued last-minute “campaign propaganda”.

“All day politicians have been talking in the media,” the leader said in a Facebook post.

“The only one barred from talking over the media is me”.

The committee also stepped in to discipline the ultra-Orthodox Shas party for promising “keys to heaven” for voters who selected them.

“Those who vote for Shas will go straight to heaven,” read a leaflet being distributed by party activists on Tuesday.

Despite the wrangling of the final push for votes, many Israelis said their minds had been made long before polling day.

“I’ve always voted Likud and I think, I hope, that things will get better under Netanyahu,” Elizier, an Israeli citizen from central Jerusalem, told MEE.

Another voter, who only gave the name Shelley said she voted for the right-wing Jewish Home: “Because I’m a religious Zionist. The rest is self-explanatory”.

Some voters said also their decisions were little affected by the personal negative campaigning after an election in which many opposition activists united behind the slogan “Anyone But Bibi”, the popular nickname for Netanyahu. Herzog, the Zionist Union frontman, launched a personal attack against the leader on Tuesday, calling him a “lying, inciting Prime Minister”.

Margalit Elis, an 87-year-old who has voted in every one of Israel’s 20 elections, said on Tuesday that she had voted for Moshe Kahlon, head of the Kulanu [All Of Us] party and a former Communications Minister under Netanyahu who won popularity by slashing the price of mobile telephone charges.

“He is a man of the people, he is nice and makes a good impression,” Elis told Israeli daily Jerusalem Post.

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