World
Israeli political landscape unclear
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Source: CCTV.com | 02-11-2009 13:35
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni is urging her right-wing rival, Benjamin Netanyahu to join a Kadima-led unity government.
Exit polls suggest a narrow victory for Kadima, but it remains unclear who will emerge as the winner in the end.
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Israel's Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni waves to supporters upon her arrival at party headquarters in Tel Aviv, February 11, 2009. (Damir Sagolj/Reuters) |
Over two-thirds of the votes have been counted and exit polls have Livni's Kadima party winning the most votes in Israel's general election.
A survey by Israeli TV Channel 10 suggests Kadima won 30 seats in the 120-member parliament, while its main rival, the right-wing Likud party, got 28.
The poll also found that an ultra nationalist party and the center-left Labor party gained 15 and 13 seats respectively.
Ballots cast by soldiers on bases around the country won't be tallied until Thursday evening.
That could shift the results by a seat or two. If she wins, Livni would become Israel's second female prime minister after Golda Meir.
But analysts say even if she forms a government, the right-wing coalition partners would oppose to her vision of giving up land in exchange for a peace deal with the Palestinians.
Netanyahu is calling for a broad based coalition, but says he'll first turn to his "natural partners in the national camp,"