Israel Radio reported that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu intends to question the validity of the results of the general elections, which will be held next Tuesday, if he is defeated.

Israel Radio said that Netanyahu intends to open an investigation into the conduct of the Presidency of the Central Elections Committee, based on a report that State Comptroller Matniahu Angelman intends to publish before the elections.

Meanwhile, opinion polls in Israel have shown the lead in Netanyahu's Likud party, and its right-wing rivals have retreated;

This enhances Netanyahu's ability to muster a parliamentary majority that allows him to head the next government.

Benjamin Netanyahu will lead Israel, next Tuesday, to 4 parliamentary elections within two years, while his trial in 3 corruption files, charges of bribery and breach of trust, continues.

But Netanyahu's supporters believe that the charges against him are fabricated, and that they are the work of left-wing elites, to isolate the right under his leadership from power.

For more than 8 months, thousands of Israelis have demonstrated every week, and sometimes more than once during the week;

To demand the resignation of Netanyahu, due to his involvement in corruption and mismanagement of the Corona virus crisis in his government.

The demonstrations are witnessing in many of their stations confrontations with the police, arrests of demonstrators, and thousands of Israelis are calling for Netanyahu to resign, due to the accusations leveled against him in cases of corruption.

The Israeli general elections are held on March 23, the fourth in less than two years.

The latest opinion poll conducted by "was" the "Likud" party, led by Netanyahu, winning 29 seats, followed by the "Future" party headed by opposition leader Yair Lapid with 20 seats.

At the end of January 2020, Avichai Mandelblit, the legal advisor to the Israeli government, filed an indictment against Netanyahu, which included bribery, fraud and breach of trust.

For years, the Israeli government has been forming a coalition of several parties;

Because there are no large parties that have the confidence of 61 deputies, which is the number required to form a government.

Since April 2019, three general election rounds have taken place in Israel, the last of which was in March 2020, following which a coalition was formed between Netanyahu and the head of the Blue and White party, Benny Gantz.

And the Knesset itself dissolved automatically at the end of last December, due to disagreements between Netanyahu and Gantz, so that Israel would go to new early elections this March.