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Conversion therapy vote marks beginning of end for Israel's unity government

The vote to ban conversion therapy in Israel has exposed the depth of the crisis between the Likud and Blue and White.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (R) and his wife Sara Netanyahu cast their ballots during the Israeli legislative elections, at a polling station in Jerusalem on March 2, 2020. - Netanyahu urged people to vote despite widespread concerns about the coronavirus outbreak, as the longest-serving leader in the Jewish state's history cast his ballot. Israelis were voting for a third time in 12 months today, with embattled Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu seeking to end the country's political crisis an

The coalition partners running the Israeli government have been trying to conceal the vanishing trust between them. But the July 22 vote over a bill banning conversion therapy exposed the depth of the crisis. Though a new round of elections  in the heat of the coronavirus crisis seemed improbable until recently, another vote seems almost inevitable now.

The best and fastest way for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to make new elections happen would be insisting on a one-year budget, which his coalition partner Defense Minister Benny Gantz opposes. The last possible date to approve the state budget is Aug. 25. According to Israeli law, a vote on the budget equals a confidence vote in the government. If the budget fails to be approved, the Knesset is dissolved automatically and new elections will take place in November. That fate looked likely as of yesterday, and the blame game is already in motion.

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