Just noticed that the question specifically talks about after the next election. What if a government can't be formed after the next election like happened multiple times in 2019-2021? Will it be resolved to the incumbent PM of the transition government?
Good question. I'll go with the first official PM after the next election (so if they can't form a coalition and go to another election I'll wait for that one).
He's doing badly in polls, has had massive weekly protests against him for most of his term, and completely dropped the ball on the country's biggest national security disaster in fifty years.
Israeli politics is pretty favorable to charismatic newcomers; Lapid and Gantz both got the 2nd largest Knesset party in their first elections, IIRC. It didn't get them the prime ministership though, with Netanyahu running against them and being a much more talented politican then both. Yossi Cohen can run no earlier then June, in any case. I'd take NO at 8%, but it will be interesting.
@EliasShammas I agree it's not impossible, but he was at 20%+ for a while which seems unreasonably high (the current odds make more sense).
Since some people have been betting on "other"; note that it's very unlikely to win since people can add new likely-seeming candidates until the election.
@ShakedKoplewitz the information mark over "other" says that new answers are split from this answer. Not sure exactly how this works (does it split 50-50?) but seems like betting on other does something.
@NivCohen I bought "no" on other but don't currently have any (although I do seem to have some "yes" on Bibi and Lapid now, which I didn't buy). So I'm guessing buying yes/no on "other" just automatically translates to owning the corresponding amount of yes/no shares on the other currently existing candidates.