JERUSALEM: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday announced a deal with a far-right party which agreed to withdraw from elections next month in exchange for a pledge to legalise medicinal cannabis.

Zehut, a libertarian Jewish nationalist party, was also promised a ministerial portfolio in exchange for not putting up candidates for the September 17 legislative elections, its head Moshe Feiglin said.

At a joint press conference, Netanyahu told Feiglin: “I see you as a minister in the next government and I see you as a partner with a common vision.”

The veteran Israeli prime minister and Likud party chair is trying to secure right-wing votes for his Likud party ahead of the polls, after he failed to cobble together a coalition following legislative elections in April.

In the last election campaign, Feiglin’s party had promised to legalise cannabis — a stance that won votes beyond the usual right-wing reservoir.

But Zehut still only won 2.7% of votes in those elections, below a threshold of 3.5% required for representation in the Knesset.

In a bid to prevent right-wing votes being wasted, Netanyahu — the longest serving prime minister in Israeli history — has said he will do his utmost to persuade small right-wing parties with little chance of meeting the threshold not to run.

The agreement between his Likud party and Zehut— seen by AFP — states that “in the first Knesset session, a bill will be voted on for the legalisation of marijuana for medical purposes”.

The proposed bill would also open Israel to imports of medical marijuana.

Feiglin had been a Likud lawmaker before setting up his own party in 2015.

Two other small-right wing parties remain in the running: Jewish Power, two of whose candidates have been banned under a law against incitement to racism, and the orthodox Noam party, known for campaigning against LGBT rights. — AFP