Netanyahu, along with his right-wing and religious backers, currently has 52 seats


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has come up short in being able to form a majority coalition without the support of unlikely bedfellows following the publication of Israel's final election results on Thursday.

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Netanyahu, along with his right-wing and religious backers, currently has 52 seats, according to the official numbers of the Central Elections Committee, 9 shy of a 61 seat majority in the Knesset (Israel Parliament).

Even with the support of right-wing political faction Yamina (7), which has not committed to backing the premier, Netanyahu will still need to convince the Islamist Ra'am party (4) to support his coalition or manage to sway two newly elected lawmakers away from the "anti-Netanyahu" bloc in the opposition. 

Prospects of recruiting the Islamist faction onto Netanyahu side, however, appear slim after the far-right Religious Zionism camp, which won 6 seats on Tuesday, forcefully stated on Thursday that it will not work with Ra'am's chairman Mansour Abbas. 

“The irresponsible voices of some right-wing elements in recent days who support such reliance… reflect dangerous confusion," Smotrich said in a Facebook post. 

"Friends, get this out of your head. It will not come about, not on my watch.”

But Netanyahu's main opposition, Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid party (17), along with the "coalition of change," also lacks a majority in parliament, with Blue and White (8), Yamina, Yisrael Beytenu (7), Labor (7), New Hope (6) and Meretz (6) only reaching 57 mandates.

Read more at i24