Netanyahu’s savior: Meet the Arab Islamist who can sway the election
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Netanyahu’s partnership with Abbas began making news late last year, after a warm interaction was caught between Netanyahu and Abbas at a meeting of the Knesset Committee on Violence in the Arab Sector, which the Arab MK heads. The two cooperated closely in the past in an attempt to form a coalition of 60 MKs with Abbas’s support from outside following the April 2019 election.
“Over the past year and a half, there were proposals to abstain on governments formed and in return receive achievements for Arab society,” he told The Jerusalem Post in November. “Arab society suffers from plagues of crime, violence and unemployment. This got worse with corona. There is a housing crisis, with no building for young Arab couples and families. More than 100,000 live in unrecognized villages without streets, electricity and water. We want the government to initiate a plan for economic development.”In return for helping those relatively uncontroversial requests, Abbas, unlike other Arab MKs, is willing to compromise with the Likud, even if it means considering aiding the passage of bills that could enable Netanyahu to evade prosecution.“Those who come toward us merit mulling going toward them on their interests,” he said then. “I will not be taken for granted. I want to serve the people who elected me.”
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