JERUSALEM (Reuters) - In the cold reality of politics, the killing of four French Jews in a Paris supermarket seems to have helped Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu deliver a strong message to Israeli voters that he has their back.
With two months to go until Israel's national election, Netanyahu - who marched with dozens of world leaders at a memorial rally for the victims of last week's Islamist militant attacks in the French capital - heads a crowded pack of candidates despite the challenge of a new centre-left alliance.