Jerusalem city councilmen Moshe Lion and Ofer Berkovitch were running neck and neck in the race for Jerusalem mayor early Wednesday, with 95% of the 200,000 votes cast counted.
Lion had a lead of one percent, with 50.46%, compared to 49.54% for Berkovtich in a race that was impacted by a rift inside the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) community.
In the first round of voting on Ocober 30, Lion won the most votes out of four candidates, thanks to the support he received from the Degel Hatorah and Shas parties. His own Jerusalem Shelanu party did not receive enough votes to make it into the 31-member Jerusalem city council.
By contrast, Berkovitch’s Hitorerut party won seven seats, more than any other party. Due to its rift with Degel Hatorah, the Agudat Yisrael party told its supporters not to vote in the election.
Consequently, there was better turnout in secular and religious Zionist neighborhoods like Baka than haredi neighborhoods like Mea Shearim.
Earlier, Berkovitch has as much as a 10 percent lead with a smaller amount of the votes counted, and the atmosphere at Lion's campaign headquarters was negative. But the mood improved as Berkovitch's lead became smaller.
In other races, former Likud MK Carmel Shama-Hakohen defeated incumbent Yisrael Singer in Ramat Gan, Rafi Saar led former police investigations department head Yossi Sitbon in Kfar Saba, Avichai Shtern led Yossi Malka in Kfar Saba, Eilat mayor Meir Yitzhak Halevi was re-elected, Shuki Ohana of Likud won in Tzfat and the former head of US president donald Trump's campaign in Israel Tzvika Brot beat incumbent Yossi Bahar in Bat Yam.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called Halevi, Ohana and Brot to congratulate them.