'Full of holes like Swiss cheese': Israeli PM says he won't step down over corruption allegations
Police have recommend indicting Benjamin Netanyahu on breach of trust and bribery charges
With his coalition partners dutifully lining up behind him, the longtime leader is angrily dismissing the allegations and the critics calling on him to step down, and has readied himself for a prolonged battle over his political legitimacy as the attorney general considers whether to ultimately press charges.
The police announcement that Netanyahu's acceptance of nearly $300,000 in gifts from two billionaires amounted to bribery sent shockwaves through the Israeli political system and delivered a humiliating blow to Netanyahu after years of allegations and investigations.
'The coalition is stable'
But it did not appear to immediately threaten his lengthy rule as reaction largely fell along partisan lines. Nearly all of Netanyahu's cabinet ministers issued statements of support and his coalition partners all signalled they would stick by him, for now.
"Let me reassure you: the coalition is stable. No one, not I and no one else, plans to go to elections. We will continue to work together with you for the people of Israel until the end of our term," he said to a gathering of local government officials in Tel Aviv. "After I read the recommendations report, I can say it is biased, extreme, full of holes like Swiss cheese and doesn't hold water."
In an impassioned defence, Netanyahu took aim at police investigators saying their figures were vastly inflated and tried "to create a false impression of exchanges that never existed."
Though he is not legally compelled to resign, several opposition figures called on Netanyahu to do so to avoid corrupting the office further.
Netanyahu had urged earlier PM to resign
Under similar circumstances a decade ago Netanyahu, then the opposition leader, urged then-prime minister Ehud Olmert to resign after police recommended he be indicted, saying a leader "sunk up to his neck in interrogations" could not govern properly.
In contrast to Olmert, who eventually stepped down and was convicted and imprisoned, Netanyahu is still relatively popular with the public and enjoys broad political support in his Likud party and among coalition partners — nearly all of whom stand to lose power if elections were held today.
Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan, who oversees the police, said the prime minister "deserves the assumption of innocence," while Netanyahu's coalition whip, David Amsalem, accused the police of committing "an illegitimate act here to attempt a coup d'etat in Israel."
More importantly, the coalition parties that keep Netanyahu afloat said they would await the ruling of Attorney General Avihai Mandelblit, who could take months to decide whether to file charges.
The only crack in the wall-to-wall support came from Education Minister Naftali Bennett, head of the nationalistic Jewish Home party, who said Netanyahu could keep serving but was "not living up to the standard" expected of his office.
Police recommended indicting Netanyahu over accepting gifts from Hollywood mogul Arnon Milchan and Australian billionaire James Packer, and over suspicions that he offered to give preferential treatment to a newspaper publisher in exchange for favourable coverage.
Police said that in that in return for lavish gifts that included jewelry, expensive cigars and champagne, Netanyahu had operated on Milchan's behalf on U.S. visa matters, tried to legislate a generous tax break for him and sought to promote his interests in the Israeli media market.
Legal limbo
One of the biggest surprises to emerge was that Yair Lapid, leader of the centrist opposition Yesh Atid party, had given testimony about Netanyahu's alleged efforts to help Milchan that he witnessed during his term as finance minister.
"That's how criminals talk, not public servants," Lapid responded, saying that as a law abiding citizen he merely gave a short testimony upon the request of police.
"You cannot represent us in the world, when every foreign leader knows that you stand accused of serious offences. For the good of the citizens of Israel, the prime minister needs to vacate his post," he said Wednesday to Netanyahu and his allies.
Other leading opposition figures and even former Netanyahu allies called on him to resign as well.
Netanyahu has claimed to be a victim of an overaggressive police force and a media witch hunt that has also targeted his family. In an emotional television appearance late Tuesday, he vowed not only to serve out his term but run again for re-election. Netanyahu has served as prime minister since 2009, and previously from 1996 to 1999.
In a second case, Netanyahu reportedly was recorded asking Arnon Mozes, the publisher of the Yediot Ahronot daily, for positive coverage in exchange for promoting legislation that would weaken a free newspaper that had cut into Yediot's business. Police said there was sufficient evidence to charge both Milchan and Mozes with offering bribes and Netanyahu with taking them.
While ministers and mayors are required to resign if indicted, Israeli law is less clear when it comes to the prime minister. Given the legal limbo, and the prolonged process that could lie ahead, Netanyahu's political future depended mostly on public opinion and political constellations that resulted.