story before. i've read this headline about six times. it seems like a fragile coalition. do you think it's going to hold up? >> we've got two hurdles. one is over the next 10, 12 days, between now and mid-june. can they get a vote of confidence in the israeli knesset, in the parliament. that means bibi doesn't pull away two or three people before that. if they get through that, then the hard part starts. they've got a government. and the only thing they can agree on is their opposition to bibi. this is an end zone coalition, not a unity coalition. so what they can actually do, whether they can hang together, odds are against it. >> there are a lot of people that are looking to say, we'll get bibi out. is it really going to change policy that much? >> no, because the new prime minister is at least as far to the right if not farther than bibi. they can probably agree on some domestic policy. this bridge or that. formally in the coalition, one