Originally published by the Voice of America (www.voanews.com).
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May 2, 2007

Israeli Prime Minister Fights for Political Survival
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=174DA62:A6F02AD83191E160AB93372306018D939574F7DCC14957C0 Ehud Olmert faces
growing pressure to resign following publication this week of report
critical of his leadership during last year's war in Lebanon Pressure
is growing on Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert to resign, following
the publication this week of a report critical of his leadership
during last year's war in Lebanon. As VOA's Jim Teeple reports from
Jerusalem, Israeli media outlets report the country's defense
minister, who was also criticized in the Lebanon War report, could
resign, later Wednesday.







Ehud Olmert Mr. Olmert's political allies began deserting him,
Wednesday, leading to fevered speculation the prime minister's days in
power may be coming to an end. Avigdor Itzhaki, who heads Mr. Olmert's
Kadima Party faction in the Knesset, told Israel radio it was time to
form a new coalition.

Itzhaki says he does not believe the time is right for elections, but
that Mr. Olmert should step aside and allow a new governing coalition
to be formed, immediately.

Polls published Wednesday in major newspapers indicate about
two-thirds of Israelis want Mr. Olmert to step down.

Mr. Olmert says he will not resign, despite the publication of the
report on Monday that blamed him, Defense Minister Amir Peretz and
former Israeli Defense Forces Chief Dan Halutz for not having a proper
plan, when Israel went to war in Lebanon, last year.

Newspaper columnist Uri Dromi says a key test of whether Mr. Olmert
will stay or go could come Thursday. He says support for the prime
minister is slipping away.

"It is wavering. It all depends on what the response of the public
will be," he said. "People are organizing a rally for Thursday, hoping
that thousands and thousands will show up and take to the streets --
eventually start such a snowball effect that will bring the prime
minister down."

Mr. Olmert has been in power a little more than a year, but his
once-enviable poll ratings sank precipitously following Israel's
performance in last year's war in Lebanon. Israeli forces were widely
perceived to have failed to militarily defeat Hezbollah forces in
Lebanon.