<p>Israel's Naftali Bennett is a multi-millionaire former high-tech entrepreneur who made a name in politics with hardline religious-nationalist rhetoric and who could be the kingmaker following Israel's election next week.</p>.<p>Bennett leads the Yamina party, which has backed Israel's proposed annexation of parts of the occupied West Bank, while Bennett himself has made pitches to hard-right voters throughout his career.</p>.<p>As the former defence minister eyes a return to government, he has highlighted his management experience, arguing he is the man to heal Israel's pandemic-battered economy.</p>.<p>Bennett had been part of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition that collapsed in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/benjamin-netanyahu-master-politician-fighting-for-survival-961806.html" target="_blank">Benjamin Netanyahu: Master politician fighting for survival</a></strong></p>.<p>But he was not asked to join the Netanyahu-led unity government formed in May, a move seen as an expression of the premier's personal contempt towards him, despite their shared ideology.</p>.<p>Bennett entered politics after selling his tech start-up for $145 million in 2005 and the next year became chief of staff to Netanyahu, who was then in opposition.</p>.<p>He was widely regarded as a Netanyahu protege, but now he could play a starring role in ending the prime minister's record 12-year tenure.</p>.<p>Polls point to another inconclusive result in the March 23 vote, Israel's fourth in two years.</p>.<p>While the precise vote share is impossible to predict, multiple scenarios suggest Yamina's seats will be decisive in determining whether Netanyahu, or the anti-Netanyahu bloc, can form a majority.</p>.<p>Bennett has said he could sit in an anti-Netanyahu government, but he has not ruled out joining the premier, especially if that helps avoid a dreaded fifth election.</p>.<p>A former special forces commando who will be 49 two days after the election, Bennett is the son of US-born parents and lives with his wife Galit and four children in the central city of Raanana.</p>.<p>After leaving Netanyahu's office he became in 2010 the head of the Yesha Council, which lobbies for Jewish settlers in the West Bank.</p>.<p>He then took politics by storm in 2012 when he took charge of the hard-right Jewish Home party, which was facing extinction from parliament.</p>.<p>He increased its parliamentary presence fourfold, while making a series of incendiary comments about the Palestinian conflict.</p>.<p>In 2013, he said Palestinian "terrorists should be killed, not released."</p>.<p>He also argued that the West Bank is not under occupation because "there was never a Palestinian state here", and that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could not be resolved but must be endured like a piece of "shrapnel in the buttocks".</p>.<p>Beyond holding the defence portfolio, Bennett has served as Netanyahu's economy minister and education minister.</p>.<p>He re-branded Jewish Home as Yamina (Rightward) in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/weeks-of-angry-demonstrations-hound-israels-netanyahu-to-the-polls-962148.html" target="_blank">Weeks of angry demonstrations hound Israel's Netanyahu to the polls</a></strong></p>.<p>In opposition and with the coronavirus pandemic raging last year, Bennett dampened his right-wing rhetoric to focus on the health crisis, releasing plans to contain the virus and aid the economy.</p>.<p>He has sought to broaden his appeal, and in Israel's chaotic and divided political scene, he has an outside shot at being prime minister in an anti-Netanyahu coalition.</p>.<p>"In the next years we need to put aside politics and issues like annexation or a Palestinian state, and focus on gaining control over the coronavirus pandemic, healing the economy and mending internal rifts," he told army radio in November.</p>
<p>Israel's Naftali Bennett is a multi-millionaire former high-tech entrepreneur who made a name in politics with hardline religious-nationalist rhetoric and who could be the kingmaker following Israel's election next week.</p>.<p>Bennett leads the Yamina party, which has backed Israel's proposed annexation of parts of the occupied West Bank, while Bennett himself has made pitches to hard-right voters throughout his career.</p>.<p>As the former defence minister eyes a return to government, he has highlighted his management experience, arguing he is the man to heal Israel's pandemic-battered economy.</p>.<p>Bennett had been part of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's coalition that collapsed in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/benjamin-netanyahu-master-politician-fighting-for-survival-961806.html" target="_blank">Benjamin Netanyahu: Master politician fighting for survival</a></strong></p>.<p>But he was not asked to join the Netanyahu-led unity government formed in May, a move seen as an expression of the premier's personal contempt towards him, despite their shared ideology.</p>.<p>Bennett entered politics after selling his tech start-up for $145 million in 2005 and the next year became chief of staff to Netanyahu, who was then in opposition.</p>.<p>He was widely regarded as a Netanyahu protege, but now he could play a starring role in ending the prime minister's record 12-year tenure.</p>.<p>Polls point to another inconclusive result in the March 23 vote, Israel's fourth in two years.</p>.<p>While the precise vote share is impossible to predict, multiple scenarios suggest Yamina's seats will be decisive in determining whether Netanyahu, or the anti-Netanyahu bloc, can form a majority.</p>.<p>Bennett has said he could sit in an anti-Netanyahu government, but he has not ruled out joining the premier, especially if that helps avoid a dreaded fifth election.</p>.<p>A former special forces commando who will be 49 two days after the election, Bennett is the son of US-born parents and lives with his wife Galit and four children in the central city of Raanana.</p>.<p>After leaving Netanyahu's office he became in 2010 the head of the Yesha Council, which lobbies for Jewish settlers in the West Bank.</p>.<p>He then took politics by storm in 2012 when he took charge of the hard-right Jewish Home party, which was facing extinction from parliament.</p>.<p>He increased its parliamentary presence fourfold, while making a series of incendiary comments about the Palestinian conflict.</p>.<p>In 2013, he said Palestinian "terrorists should be killed, not released."</p>.<p>He also argued that the West Bank is not under occupation because "there was never a Palestinian state here", and that the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could not be resolved but must be endured like a piece of "shrapnel in the buttocks".</p>.<p>Beyond holding the defence portfolio, Bennett has served as Netanyahu's economy minister and education minister.</p>.<p>He re-branded Jewish Home as Yamina (Rightward) in 2018.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/weeks-of-angry-demonstrations-hound-israels-netanyahu-to-the-polls-962148.html" target="_blank">Weeks of angry demonstrations hound Israel's Netanyahu to the polls</a></strong></p>.<p>In opposition and with the coronavirus pandemic raging last year, Bennett dampened his right-wing rhetoric to focus on the health crisis, releasing plans to contain the virus and aid the economy.</p>.<p>He has sought to broaden his appeal, and in Israel's chaotic and divided political scene, he has an outside shot at being prime minister in an anti-Netanyahu coalition.</p>.<p>"In the next years we need to put aside politics and issues like annexation or a Palestinian state, and focus on gaining control over the coronavirus pandemic, healing the economy and mending internal rifts," he told army radio in November.</p>