Jerusaelm, Israel - The forlorn figure of Miki Zohar, the Likud whip who chairs the key Arrangements Committee in the Knesset, demonstrated Monday the precarious position of the ruling party and its leader Binyamin Netanyahu. The Likud suffered defeat in the vote on forming the committee, with the anti-Netanyahu bloc gaining a majority which will allow them to determine the composition of other committees in the Knesset as well as who will serve on them – a right usually reserved for the government. Zohar commented dejectedly that  “We understand and internalize that we are on the way to the opposition.” At the same time he vowed that Netanyahu would lead the opposition and that the government  “won’t have an easy time with us.”

Other Likud figures as well as Zohar  are already conceding defeat and suggesting to Netanyahu to tell President Reuven Rivlin he is already giving up efforts to form a coalition, despite having another 15 days to complete the task, according to a Channel 12 report.

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Immediately after the vote to approve its formation, the committee set to work, and Zohar quickly suffered a setback when his suggestion that there be two deputy Knesset speakers was voted down. Zohar responded by adjourning the panel and leaving a large number of Knesset committees without a chair and the Knesset with no deputy speakers, thus effectively stalling legal processes in the Knesset.

Zohar’s opponents did not take this lightly. “The Likud has decided to silence the Knesset, chairman Zohar is in the minority, and for him if the Likud does not have a majority, to hell with Knesset and the state,” Meretz MK Tamar Zandberg said in a statement.

Likud’s defeat on building the Arrangements Committee came after Ra’am, the Arab Islamist party, voted against its proposal and backed the alternative, suggested by MK Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid party. Ra’am is still being courted by both blocs in the Knesset after it has stressed that it would not decide who to support in forming a government. Netanyahu is still hoping to build a government based on outside support from Ra’am, but the idea has been rejected outright by the Religious Zionism party, which has repeatedly said it will not stay in a coalition that relies on cooperation with Ra’am, a party associated with the Islamist movement which is ardently anti-Zionist.

In the wake of Ra’am’s vote to stop the Likud proposal in the Arrangements Committee, Religious Zionism leaders remarked that this further strengthened their view that a government cannot in any way be dependent on Ra’am, even for outside support.

With Ra’am openly cooperating with the opposition on such a significant development and said to have received assurances from Lapid that it will be given key legislative positions if he is given the chance to form a government, Netanyahu’s hopes of cobbling together a coalition appeared to be fading.

Shas leader Aryeh Deri suggested Sunday a way to forgo further elections by conducting a direct vote for prime minister. Whoever receives the majority of votes for prime minister will have the political power to form a government even with the parties in the present Knesset. This may enable Netanyahu to gain the confidence of the electorate and establish a government

However if Deri’s suggestion is not implemented (as it is unlikely to gain a majority) and if Netanyahu fails to form a government or returns his mandate to the president, Rivlin could offer the mandate to Lapid, who is next in line in terms of the number of MKs who recommended him for the task, or alternatively ask the Knesset to choose another lawmaker. If the next effort to form a government also fails, Israel could yet face a fifth election within two years.