With the Knesset elections campaign (Tuesday) entering its last two weeks, which will be held on November 1, and indications that if it continues in this way, it will not be resolved, and they may have to hold another election after several months, according to what many experts say.
The Israeli parties engaged in frantic campaigns to recruit the many frustrated voters and raise their support rate.
But cracks began to appear within the party camps, as small parties accused their allies from the big parties of attracting votes from them.
In the right-wing camp led by Benjamin Netanyahu, it launched a campaign to liquidate the "Jewish Home" party led by Interior Minister Ayelet Shaked.
Opinion polls indicate that she will get about two percent of the vote, and will not cross the threshold, so she must be pressured from now to withdraw.
She refuses this and says that Netanyahu will not become prime minister unless he crosses the electoral threshold and she wins 4 seats.
In the Leftist camp led by sitting Prime Minister Yair Lapid, they also began the process of withdrawing the allied parties. Lapid's campaign began when he responded to Gantz's campaign, during which he tries to conclude that he (Gantz) is the only one capable of forming a government without Netanyahu.
Gantz claims that he maintains a good relationship with the religious and considers himself the only one who can bring them into the government in the event of Netanyahu's failure.