Friday, January 13, 2006

Likud is not down for the standing count yet

The Jerusalem Post reports that a petition has been sent to the Israeli High Court of Justice for a ruling that very well could see Ehud Olmert replaced as acting Prime Minister of Israel:

Attorney Yossi Fuchs, who is seeking a spot on the Likud Knesset list, asked the High Court of Justice on Wednesday to rule that a member of the Likud faction, rather than the Kadima faction, should be appointed interim prime minister if it is determined that Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is permanently incapacitated.

According to the petition filed by Fuchs, Attorney-General Menahem Mazuz has already announced that if Sharon is declared permanently incapacitated, a member of the Kadima Knesset faction would replace him as interim prime minister.

According to Article 30 (g) of the Basic Law: Government, "if the prime minister has died or is permanently incapacitated from carrying out his duties... the government shall designate a member of the Knesset and of the prime minister's faction to be interim prime minister..."

Sharon was elected in January 2003 as head of the Likud Party list, but left it and formed a new party and Knesset faction in November along with 14 Likud MKs, including Finance Minister Ehud Olmert. Olmert is being touted by Kadima to replace Sharon until the general election.

In his petition, Fuchs argued that the intention of the basic law was to appoint a successor from the faction that the prime minister headed on election day. "Prime Minister Ariel Sharon was appointed by the president to form a government as chairman of the Likud faction and, indeed, he heads the government on the strength of the Likud faction, which is the biggest in the Knesset, and not on the strength of Kadima faction, which split away."

If Fuchs' petition is successful that would put Likud leader Benjamin Netanyahu in charge.

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