Will Israel’s protests shake Netanyahu’s hold on power?
The protests and Israel’s first national strike since October 7 represent the latest challenge to the Israeli prime minister. What matters is what he does next, say analysts.
A cut-out with the image of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is seen as people demonstrate against Netanyahu’s government and to call for the release of hostages in Gaza, in Tel Aviv, Israel, August 31, 2024 [Florion Goga/Reuters]By Justin SalhaniPublished On 2 Sep 20242 Sep 2024
Israel has erupted in rage over the deaths of six captives in Gaza, after the country’s military recovered their bodies on Sunday, nearly 11 months after they were taken by Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups during the October 7 attacks.
The military said the captives had been killed shortly before their bodies were recovered. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu blamed Hamas for the deaths, saying, “Whoever murders hostages doesn’t want a deal.”
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But around 300,000 people took to the streets on Sunday evening to protest against Netanyahu’s government, which they blame for its failure to secure a ceasefire deal in Gaza.
Senior Hamas official Izzat al-Risheq said the six captives were killed in Israeli air strikes.
Hamas has offered to release the captives in return for an end to Israel’s devastating war in which more than 40,700 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza; the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the enclave; and the release of a large number of Palestinian prisoners, including high-profile members of Gaza’s armed groups.
On Sunday, protesters chanted slogans against the Netanyahu government, as scuffles broke out between them and the police. Israel’s main labour union called for a strike on Monday, which brought the country to an economic standstill for a few hours before a labour court ordered workers to return to their jobs.
The general strike — the first such nationwide call to stop work since October 7 — represents the latest challenge to Netanyahu’s hold on power within Israel. But the impact of the protests and strike, said analysts, will only be known in the days to come.
“It’s too soon to tell [what this means for the government],” Alon Pinkas, a former Israeli ambassador and government adviser, told Al Jazeera. “The name of the game here is sustainability — meaning will these demonstrations continue?
“Will the strike that is taking place be a one-off thing that Netanyahu is not making a big deal of so people can vent frustration and anger? Or is this going to be a recurring theme?”
Israel at boiling point
The war on Gaza has been raging since Hamas and other Palestinian factions launched an operation on October 7 during which 1,139 people in Israel were killed and around another 240 were taken captive. Israel’s devastating war on Gaza has killed nearly 41,000 people and wounded more than 94,000 others. The International Court of Justice is hearing allegations that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza. The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, meanwhile, has sought arrest warrants against Netanyahu and his Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, along with two Hamas leaders.
After a brief pause and prisoner exchange in November, a large part of Israeli society has demanded that Netanyahu negotiate a ceasefire deal to release the remaining 100 or so captives, a majority of whom are believed to still be alive.
A deal appeared to be close in late May, but Netanyahu added a series of new, non-negotiable conditions that have largely derailed talks, according to Israeli negotiators and analysts. Those conditions included keeping Israeli troops on the Philadelphi Corridor, bordering Egypt, and the Netzarim Corridor, which separates north and south Gaza.
Since then, thousands of Palestinians in Gaza have been killed and Israel has intensified operations in the West Bank and Lebanon.
“The fronts [in the West Bank and Lebanon] are real, but he did exacerbate them? Yes. Is he flirting constantly with escalation? Yes,” Pinkas said. “He needs war to continue.”
Meanwhile, Israel has focused its attempts on freeing the captives through military operations rather than negotiations. In early June, Israel launched an operation that led to the rescue of four captives, but killed over 200 Palestinians, according to Palestinian health officials.
This strategy, however, has met rising criticism inside Israel. The recent recovery of the six bodies has only further fuelled the opposition to Netanyahu’s approach.
“The government and the prime minister are now on the defensive,” Ori Goldberg, an expert on Israeli politics, told Al Jazeera. “This is about momentum now.”
‘Netanyahu’s interests are the country’s interests’
This isn’t the first time that Netanyahu has been the focal point of widespread protests in Israel. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in 2023 to protest against his plans to overhaul the country’s judicial system, in what critics claimed were attempts to evade corruption charges from a past premiership.
Protests against Netanyahu’s government continued into the summer of 2024, with protesters demanding a ceasefire deal and the release of Israeli captives in Gaza.
“[Netanyahu] absolutely has no interest in a hostage deal or ceasefire and it’s been clear,” Pinkas said. “Those who are shocked and devastated and angered about what happened should not be surprised because this is exactly what the defence minister [Gallant] and all of us were warning would happen. His and only his reluctance to engage in a deal is what made all this happen.”
In July, a poll found that 72 percent of Israelis felt Netanyahu should resign over his failures to prevent the Hamas-led operation from October 7.
Yet while he’s deeply unpopular with one segment of the population, Netanyahu has slowly risen in the polls and, as of last week, still edged out his main competitor Benny Gantz in popularity. Netanyahu also still maintains the support of the far right, which includes his ministers Itamar Ben-Gvir (national security) and Bezalel Smotrich (finance).
“He not only formed this coalition with them but gave them key positions and he encouraged and emboldened and empowered them and never called them into order when they went rogue,” Pinkas said. “So he’s not being held hostage, he’s part of the bank robbery.”
While many have pushed for Netanyahu to make a ceasefire deal, Ben-Gvir responded to the news of the six captives’ deaths with calls to build settlements in Gaza.
“Those who place the blame on the Israeli government echo Hamas propaganda,” Ben-Gvir wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “In Gaza, too, the price of killing the abductees should be where it hurts them – the occupation of more territory and the establishment of a Jewish settlement in Gaza.”
Analysts, however, believe that placating the far right has not come without cost and now Netanyahu is playing for his political survival.
“He’s not some completely debauched dictator acting only on personal interest,” Goldberg said. “He does, however, believe his personal interests are the country’s interests and it can only be saved if he’s at the helm.”
Netanyahu cooked?
Until now, few politicians have made significant moves against Netanyahu. Analysts like Goldberg say this is because a fully coherent political alternative to the war Israel is launching on Gaza is yet to take shape.
But in the last few days, Netanyahu’s main rivals have started to budge. Defense Minister Gallant said Netanyahu prioritising the “Philadelphi Corridor at the cost of the lives of the hostages is a moral disgrace.” For his part, Israeli opposition leader Yair Lapid threw his weight behind Monday’s labour strikes.
With Netanyahu being backed into a corner once again, analysts believe his next move will be a crucial one.
“It’s fair to assume that [Netanyahu] would do the only thing he’s ever done: double down,” Elia Ayoub, a postdoctoral researcher, writer and host of the Fire These Times podcast, told Al Jazeera. “I don’t know if the internal pressure will be enough since he already sees himself as a dead man politically if he loses.
“He has everything to lose if he concedes.”