After the
36th government lost its majority,
snap elections were called in 2022. They resulted in the Netanyahu bloc gaining a majority, and a government was successfully negotiated between
Likud,
Otzma Yehudit,
Noam,
Religious Zionist Party,
United Torah Judaism, and
Shas. The coalition was sworn in on 29 December 2022. With this new government, Netanyahu returned to the premiership, having previously been out of office since the anti-Netanyahu bloc won a majority in the
2021 election and formed a government without Netanyahu's Likud. Five members of the
National Unity party (
Benny Gantz,
Gadi Eizenkot,
Gideon Sa'ar,
Hili Tropper, and
Yifat Shasha-Biton) joined an
emergency wartime government in October 2023 following the outbreak of the
Gaza war. Gantz and Eizenkot also joined the
Israeli war cabinet.
Coalition composition On 25 March 2024, Sa'ar announced that
New Hope had resigned from the government. In September 2024, New Hope rejoined the government. On 9 June 2024,
National Unity, led by
Benny Gantz, left the unity government that was formed following the outbreak of the
Gaza war. On 19 January 2025, Otzma Yehudit announced that it would leave the government because of
a Gaza ceasefire agreement. The resignations went into effect two days later. Party members rejoined the government following the collapse of the ceasefire agreement in March. On 13 March 2025, it was announced that Gideon Sa'ar had agreed to dissolve his
New Hope faction and merge into Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu's
Likud. The Likud-New Hope agreement was approved by Likud's central committee in August 2025; the party was expected to vote on an August 2021 resolution barring members of New Hope from serving in Likud. On 24 March 2025,
Avi Maoz of the
Noam party left the coalition government. On 14 July 2025, the two factions of
United Torah Judaism,
Degel HaTorah and
Agudat Yisrael, both announced that they would be leaving the government after dissatisfaction with a proposed bill on
Haredi conscription by
Yuli Edelstein. The resignations will leave Netanyahu's government with a 60-seat majority in the Knesset. On 16 July 2025, the religious council for
Shas, called the
Moetzet Chachmei HaTorah, instructed the party to leave the government but remain in the coalition. Following a series of cabinet resignations from the party, some of the resigned ministers returned to the Knesset.
Formation of anti-Netanyahu parties In April 2025,
Naftali Bennett registered a new party called
Bennett 2026, and publicly announced that he would contest the 2026 election the following November. On 30 June 2025,
Gadi Eisenkot announced that he would resign from the Knesset and would not participate in the next election on behalf of Benny Gantz's National Unity, over differences on how to hold a
leadership election for the party. Eisenkot could join Yair Lapid's Yesh Atid and may take over the leadership of the party from Lapid, join Naftali Bennett's Bennett 2026 party, or run independently with a new party. A source confirmed that Eisenkot and Lapid were in contact, but denied that there was a potential agreement. He announced the formation of
Yashar! with Eisenkot on 16 September 2025. On 1 July,
Matan Kahana announced that he would resign his seat, It was announced on 18 September that the party had registered to run in the next election.
Opposition unity On 27 August 2025,
Avigdor Lieberman, the head of
Yisrael Beiteinu, sent a letter to Lapid calling for a meeting with Eisenkot and Bennett to discuss a potential government following a new election. Gantz and
The Democrats leader Golan were notably excluded by Lieberman. Lieberman and Bennett met the same day and discussed the
Gaza war, hostage deal negotiations, and the "Israeli economy." Eisenkot and Lieberman met on 4 September and discussed "coordination" among Zionist parties on forming a new government, while Bennett met with Eisenkot on 7 September and talked about "creating a new leadership." Eisenkot also met with Lapid that same day. Lieberman remarked on 20 September that he would be unwilling to sit with Likud or Ra'am in a government. A meeting held that same night included Lapid, Eisenkot, Lieberman and Golan. Bennett was unavailable as he was observing
Yahrzeit, while Gantz did not attend because of a "scheduling conflict". The attendees agreed to form a professional body in the future which would focus on the creation of a "national constitution", pursuing "universal military conscription" and "preserving the character of the State of Israel as a Jewish, democratic and Zionist state." In January 2026, Eisenkot's office confirmed a report by
Channel 12 that he proposed a joint slate between his party, Bennett's and Yesh Atid. Several months later, Eisenkot opposed Bennett's proposal to merge their parties. Lieberman sent a letter to Lapid, Golan, Eisenkot and Bennett in January, laying out principles for a new government, focusing on conscripting the Ultra-Orthodox into the IDF. In February 2026,
Ayelet Shaked, who served as
justice minister in the
thirty-fourth government of Israel, suggested in an interview with
Hevrat HaHadashot that Bennett and Lieberman "join forces". On 26 April 2026,
Bennett 2026 and
Yesh Atid announced their intention to contest the election jointly in an alliance named
Together.
Arab parties In March 2025,
Ra'am leader
Mansour Abbas indicated in March 2025 that he intended to run for the next Knesset election, but would not participate in the following election. On 5 January 2026, Ra'am announced that it would invite Jews to join its list, which was historically only open to Arabs. On 22 January 2026, the four parties that made up the
Joint List in 2020 (
Ra'am,
Hadash,
Ta'al and
Balad) made a preliminary agreement to revive the alliance and run together. The parties have not yet reached an agreement, as of April 2026. ==Electoral system==