The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– Apr 8, 2022; Day 265
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Difficult Word/ Phrase Contextual Sense
Faultline  a problem that may not be obvious and could cause something to fail
Defect  Leave (a cause, a country or an army), often in order to join the opposing cause, country, or army
Leavened  made with yeast or other raising agent
Hametz  leavened food banned during Passover
Recess  A state of abeyance or suspended business
Stature  High level of respect gained by impressive development or achievement
Bloc  A group of countries in special alliance
Crumble  Fall apart
Animosity  ​a strong feeling of opposition, anger or hate
Plausible  Apparently reasonable and credible, and therefore convincing

Bad or worse: On the faultlines (a problem that may not be obvious and could cause something to fail) within the Israel’s ruling coalition

The faultlines within the ruling coalition in Israel are becoming increasingly evident

The resignation of lawmaker Idit Silman from Israel’s diverse ruling coalition has taken the Jewish country’s politics back to crisis and instability. With Ms. Silman defecting (Leave (a cause, a country or an army), often in order to join the opposing cause, country, or army) to the opposition Likud, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett’s government, which had the razor-thin majority of 61 lawmakers in the 120-member Knesset, lacks the numbers. Elected to the Knesset from Mr. Bennett’s right-religious Yamina party, Ms. Silman had earlier clashed with the Health Minister over allowing leavened (made with yeast or other raising agent) grain products (hametz) in hospitals during the Passover holidays. In her resignation letter, she said she could not support “harming the Jewish identity of the state of Israel”. But the real political crisis in Israel is deeper than the hametz (leavened food banned during Passover) controversy. Ever since the coalition government was formed in June last year, Likud has been in constant campaign mode, attacking Yamina for “stealing right-wing votes” and using them to form “a dangerous left-wing government”. The Knesset is now in recess (A state of abeyance or suspended business) until mid-May. When it convenes, the Opposition will need one more lawmaker to defect if it wants to bring down the government through a no-trust motion. Former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is likely to do everything he can, as the leader of Likud, to get more right-wing MKs to break with the coalition. And the government is under pressure to keep the coalition floating.

The crisis has also exposed the coalition’s faultlines and Mr. Bennett’s diminishing stature (High level of respect gained by impressive development or achievement). The alliance was formed after four elections in two years failed to produce a stable government under Mr. Netanyahu, who is also facing corruption charges. What brought a diverse set of parties, from the centre-right Yesh Atid and Blue and White to the right-religious Yamina and Arab Raam, was their intention to see Mr. Netanyahu depart from the premiership. Yair Lapid, leader of Yesh Atid, the largest bloc (A group of countries in special alliance) in the coalition, offered the Prime Minister’s post to Mr. Bennett to ensure Yamina’s support. That is how Mr. Bennett, whose party got seven MKs in the 2021 legislative election (now at five), ended up being the Prime Minister. But Ms. Silman’s resignation has practically paralysed the government. Without a majority, it would need opposition lawmakers’ support — which is unlikely — to pass legislation. And if the coalition crumbles (Fall apart), Likud, as things stand, does not have a majority to form the next government under Mr. Netanyahu unless it ties up with the Arab Joint List. Given the mutual animosity (​a strong feeling of opposition, anger or hate) between Likud and the Arab parties, this is unlikely to happen. So, there are two plausible (Apparently reasonable and credible, and therefore convincing) scenarios. One, Mr. Bennett’s paralysed government will linger on at least until March 2023 when it will have to pass a budget. Two, the country will go to its fifth election in three years if the government falls. Both look bad for the people of Israel.

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