Trailing in the polls before Tuesday’s elections, Israel’s prime minister has warned that the right-wing government he leads could be voted out of office.<br /><br /> Benjamin Netanyahu called on supporters to help him secure a fourth term in office, at a rally in Tel Aviv on Sunday. <br /><br /> “Our rivals are investing a huge effort to harm me and the Likud, to open a gap between my party, the Likud, and (our rivals), and if we don’t close this gap, there is a real danger that a left-wing government will rise to power,” Netanyahu said.<br /><br /> He’s counting on having a better chance of forming a coalition than his centre-left rivals.<br /><br /> Several final opinion polls suggested his Likud party would win fewer seats than the Zionist Union, whose co-leader Isaac Herzog took his campaign to Jerusalem’s Western Wall on Sunday.<br /><br /> Soft-spoken and witty, he has focused on the economy and is said to have benefitted from voters’ weariness with Netanyahu’s obsession with security.<br /><br /> But there are doubts as to whether Herzo