(Reuters) -
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been voted in as head of
the right-wing Likud party, overcoming his first hurdle toward winning a
fourth term in office in a March general election, results of a party
primary published on Thursday showed. Israeli opinion polls
put Likud slightly behind left-of-center Labor, giving the parliamentary
contest a taste of unpredictability, but surveys still give Netanyahu
the largest number of potential allies with whom to form a governing
coalition, making his re-election seem more likely, for now. Likud
officials were still counting the votes from Wednesday's primary
election, but Netanyahu's sole contender, former defense minister and
far-right lawmaker Danny Danon, conceded defeat soon after balloting
ended, essentially making Netanyahu the winner. "Based
on the results we see now, Prime Minister Netanyahu has won the
election. I congratulate the prime minister," Danon said in a videotaped
statement broadcast by Israeli media web sites. "We shall work together
as a united party for victory in the coming elections." More than half of some 96,000 eligible voters cast ballots at 600 polling booths across Israel
and occupied territory. Party members also chose a slate of
parliamentary candidates, but those votes were still being counted, with
results not expected to be announced until later on Thursday. Whether
or not Netanyahu secures key slots on the list for his own political
allies may influence his electability in March, pundits say. An
opinion poll published on Channel 10 television on Wednesday showed
Netanyahu's Likud trailing by two parliamentary seats behind Labor led
by Isaac Herzog, but also predicted other right-wing and religious
parties more likely to team up with Netanyahu winning a larger majority
than Labor's allies. Most
surveys published in the past month have shown similar results. Some
analysts see Netanyahu as potentially vulnerable to defeat if centrist
parties focusing on hot button economic issues wind up swaying more
voters over the next three months. In
past elections, Israelis have focused more on foreign and defense
issues which may still prove decisive should there be an uptick in
violence with Palestinians or other Arab neighbors before the election.
Netanyahu is widely seen as having an edge over his competitors on
foreign policy matters. Netanyahu,
65, is serving his third term of office, but his second consecutive
term, after being elected in 2009 and again in 2013. His first term was
in 1996, lasting through 1999.
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