Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had tried to convince Nobel laureate and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel to be a candidate in the race for president, media said on Friday.
Israeli media began reporting Netanyahu’s last-minute attempt on Tuesday, when candidates had to present 10 MPs’ signatures to be eligible for the position.
Wiesel, who lives in New York, told Yedioth Aharonoth on Friday that Netanyahu had called him three times and then tried to pressure him through mutual friends, but the 86-year-old Romanian-born Nobel Peace Prize winner refused.
“Why should I be a president?” Wiesel told Yedioth Aharonoth, the newspaper for which he had worked as a correspondent. “It’s not for me.”
Netanyahu’s efforts to draw the Jewish-American writer and political activist, who does not hold Israeli citizenship, into the presidency race were reportedly part of his attempts to prevent the election of MK Reuven Rivlin of his own Likud party as president.
Netanyahu’s office refused to comment on the report.
On Wednesday, Netanyahu – who had previously also considered legislation to postpone the vote or cancel the institution of presidency – informed Rivlin of his support, explaining he had waited to see the final list of candidates.
“As prime minister and chairman of the Likud, I support you,” Netanyahu told Rivlin over the phone, according to the premier’s office.
President Shimon Peres will step down at the end of July, just before his 91st birthday, following a political career spanning nearly seven decades.
Presidential elections will be held on June 10, it was announced last week, despite a push by several MKs to cancel the post altogether. Current official candidates include Nobel Laureate Daniel Shechtman, HaTnua MK Meir Sheetrit, and Likud MK Reuven Rivlin.