World | Ehud Olmert Israelis: Olmert Successor Is Unlikely to Forge Coalition Netanyahu calls for snap elections By Jason Farago Posted Jul 31, 2008 10:18 AM CDT Copied Tzipi Livni, center, is seeking to succeed Ehud Olmert, right, as Israel's prime minister. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner, File) Benjamin Netanyahu has called for a snap election after Ehud Olmert's sudden announcement that he will resign as Israel's PM. Riding high in the polls, the head of Likud said that "it doesn't matter who heads Kadima. They are all partners in this government's total failure." The call comes as members of the ruling party admitted to Haaretz that Olmert's successor might never take the top job. The new party leader will not automatically become PM, but must form a new government from scratch. And whoever succeeds Olmert as head of Kadima—most probably Tzipi Livni, the foreign minister—will have difficulty forming a new coaltion. Ehud Barak, the defense minister and Labor Party leader, told CNN that his party may not join with Kadima again, triggering a new national election. Read These Next Matt Damon on being 'canceled': It 'just never ends.' Spanberger becomes Virginia's first female governor. John Mellencamp's little-known side gig: Indiana football fan. An NFL team owner just became the biggest private landowner in the US. Report an error