Mr. Netanyahu continued to undermine the government on Sunday after Ms. Rinawie Zoabi’s turnaround, denouncing it as being “dependent on haters of Israel and supporters of terrorism,” referring to its Arab members. Mr. Netanyahu, Israel’s longest serving prime minister, leads the opposition and is bent on a comeback, even while on trial on corruption charges.
The tumult of recent weeks has been bad even by Israeli standards and a far cry from Mr. Bennett’s promise to end years of political chaos and impasse.
Last month, another coalition member quit, saying the government’s direction did not reflect the values of the right-wing voters who brought her party to power. The lawmaker, Idit Silman, from Mr. Bennett’s Yamina party, said it was time to try to form a new “national, Jewish, Zionist” coalition with right-wing lawmakers.
Less than two weeks ago, the small Islamist party Raam agreed to rejoin the coalition a month after suspending its involvement in protest of police actions at the Aqsa Mosque.
Israeli commentators have called this the season of political extortion, with the teetering government at risk of collapse with each resignation or suspension and with the opposition intent on luring another defector to cross the lines.
Many do not expect the government to last beyond next March, if it gets that far. If the government cannot muster a majority of 61 votes to pass a budget by the legal deadline that month, Parliament will automatically be dissolved, sending Israelis back to the ballot box next summer.