
A succession of contenders has tried to depose Benjamin Netanyahu, who has led Israel nearly uninterrupted since 2009, and now, a man who “lost his son in Gaza” is “coming for” the veteran, said The Telegraph.
Gadi Eisenkot has been described as a “stocky newcomer“ and a “teddy bear with a steel spine”. Israeli politics is a complex web but if the pundits and polls are correct, he could also be described as “prime minister“ by the end of October.
Working-class roots
He was “born into the Israeli working class” from which the right-wing Likud has “traditionally garnered so much support”, said the broadsheet. He was one of nine children in a Jewish family of Moroccan descent, part of a “historically marginalised minority” in Israel, said the Times of Israel.
He joined the military as a private soldier in the Golani infantry brigade and became the most senior officer. His “most controversial moment” came in 2016 when a combat medic killed a Palestinian terrorist who had already been wounded and didn’t pose a threat. In a “politically charged tribunal”, the Israeli military, backed by Eisenkot, tried and convicted the medic for manslaughter.
After retiring from the military, he entered politics in 2022, and briefly held a role in Netanyahu’s coalition, before forming his own party Yashar, which means “honest” in Hebrew.
His youngest son, Gal, 25, was killed in Gaza in 2023. He also lost two nephews during the invasion that followed the 7 October attacks.
Dangerous challenger
He has “emerged as the most dangerous challenger” to the “veteran” prime minister after his party became the largest in the opposition bloc hoping to replace Netanyahu ahead of elections which will take place by 27 October.
A poll in the Maariv newspaper, put Eisenkot ahead of Netanyahu for the first time, another found that 41% of voters thought Eisenkot would make a more suitable prime minister, against 40% for Netanyahu.
A razor-thin lead but commentators “increasingly believe” that he “could be the one” to break Netanyahu’s “voodoo-like grip” on the premiership with an attack from the “security-orientated centre”.
His “lack of showmanship” gives many the impression he would be an “authentic” and “strategic” leader. Dr Maoz Rosenthal, a Jerusalem-based political analyst, told The Telegraph that “many” of those who are “fed up” with Netanyahu “kind-of like this old general” who “hesitates before he speaks” and who “wants to be sure of what comes out of his mouth”.
Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef, the spiritual leader of the ultra-Orthodox Shas Party and an influential figure in Israeli politics, suggested that Shas could “be open” to joining a government led by Eisenkot, said the Jerusalem Post.
“We are in a secular country … There are those whom I don’t believe will repent,” said Yosef in a filmed speech. “There’s no chance [Netanyahu] will repent. Eisenkot might repent”.
Gadi Eisenkot is the latest challenger hoping to unseat the Israeli veteran





