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Netanyahu government loses parliament vote for first time

The vote shows the government was caught off guard by a united opposition ambush
Billboard shows Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and co-leader of Zionist Union party, Isaac Herzog on 14 March in Tel Aviv.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s ruling coalition lost a parliamentary vote on Wednesday for the first time since taking office with a knife-edge majority in May.

The vote - on a technical issue regarding jurisdiction of state bailiffs - did not directly challenge the government’s survival, but highlighted the difficulties of governance with the coalition commanding just 61 seats in the 120-member legislature.

“Netanyahu’s coalition of 61 is unable to function,” MP Karin Elharrar of the opposition Yesh Atid party and sponsor of the private members’ bill, said in a statement.

The draft must still pass three more readings before it can become law but it showed the government caught off guard by a united opposition ambush.

“Opposition members waited outside the chamber, burst in at the moment of truth and achieved a majority in the preliminary reading,” Haaretz newspaper wrote of the 46-45 upset.

“We carried out a classic ambush,” opposition leader Isaac Herzog told public radio. “We entered by surprise... Nobody suspected that there would be a majority or that we would even be present there.”

Netanyahu’s Likud party made no statement following the vote and the party’s spokeswoman could not immediately be reached for comment.

In the 17 March general election Likud won 30 seats, while Herzog’s Zionist Union trailed with 24.

After weeks of political horse-trading Netanyahu announced formation of a coalition, seen as one of the most rightwing in the country’s history.

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