The vote, constitutionally scheduled for this October, is designed as a referendum on the prime minister’s central claim to rule: that he alone can keep Israel safe.
Not only that, but Tehran’s regime still remains – despite Netanyahu’s best efforts – with what analysts describe as a greater incentive than ever to acquire a nuclear weapon.
“Israel has never been safe,” Israeli-American geographer Shaiel Ben-Ephraim told This Week in Asia. “In a security-conscious country, this is what matters.”

Nearly two-thirds of Israelis believe Netanyahu should not run for re-election, recent polls show – a damning decision prompted not only by the October 7 intelligence failure but by the perception that he has deliberately prolonged the war to avoid legal accountability, according to Middle East researcher Annelle Sheline.





