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Candidates hit the streets Friday ahead of next week's Israeli election as a world-beating coronavirus vaccination campaign enables face-to-face voter contact, with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hoping the inoculation effort earns him an elusive majority. Netanyahu, who is seeking to extend his record 12 consecutive years in power, was scheduled to tour a bustling Jerusalem market before the Jewish day of rest begins at sundown. The visit would have been unthinkable when Israel was in full lockdown just a few weeks ago but authorities have since fully vaccinated nearly half of the nine million population, the world's highest rate per capita. After a campaign dominated by Zoom events and social media messaging, Netanyahu and his rivals were meeting directly with supporters ahead of Tuesday's vote, Israel's fourth in two years. Netanyahu's main challenger, the centrist Yair Lapid, was set to mingle with voters in the central city of Hod Hasharon. During a period of unprecedented political deadlock, Netanyahu's Likud and its religious, right-wing allies have proved unable to forge a stable majority in the 120-seat parliament. But so too has the anti-Netanyahu camp, which now includes prominent Likud defectors who formed their own New Hope party last year to challenge a premier they accuse of corruption and placing political self-interest above the nation's. Netanyahu's campaign has sought to take credit for Israel's vaccination effort which is the envy of many nations. While hundreds of thousands of Palestinians living under Israeli occupation remain in the grips of the pandemic, unable to access to vaccines, the Israeli economy has largely reopened for business. "He is talking about vaccines all day. It is its agenda. That is what he wants people to talk about," Gideon Rahat, a political scientist at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem told AFP. "It is vaccines, vaccines, vaccines! You can almost think that he vaccinates the population himself." Despite the inoculations, and his clinching of deals to normalise ties with four Arab states, Netanyahu may again fall short of a majority. Three final pre-election opinion polls from public broadcaster Kan and the Maariv and Israel Hayom newspapers show Likud and its hawkish, religious allies falling narrowly short of a majority. Multiple scenarios place former Netanyahu aide and champion of the nationalist religious right, Naftali Bennett, as the kingmaker. Bennett, who served in previous Netanyahu governments, has not ruled out joining him again while simultaneously criticising the premier as he eyes a top role in a prospective anti-Netanyahu coalition. Addressing supporters in Sderot, southern Israel on Thursday, Bennett said: "Whoever wants to send home the most failed and corrupt government in the world, and wants to bring the best government Israel ever had, will cast a ballot for Bennett." Yamina party leader Bennett, a multi-millionaire former tech entrepreneur opposed to the creation of a Palestinian state, is not Netanyahu's only right-wing challengers. New Hope leader Gideon Saar is also threatening to peel away some Likud votes. Seeking to fend off the challenge, Netanyahu on Thursday sought to position himself as the only legitimate face of the Israeli right while addressing voters in southern Kiryat Gan. "There are parties which claim to be right-wing," he said. "There is a 'sort of' right and there is a real right. We are the real right." Netanyahu's main challenger in the three previous elections, centrist Benny Gantz, was punished by supporters for joining a Netanyahu-led coalition in May and is facing political extinction. Lapid's Yesh Atid party is polling second behind Likud with a projected 18 seats but there is no clear path for him to form coalition even with support from Israel's beleaguered left and the Arab-led Joint List. bur-gl/bs/kir
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