Israeli defence minister Ehud Barak will break away from the Labour party in a move on Monday that will split the once-dominant centre-left movement, but which did not appear likely to topple the governing coalition.Barak's surprise step was announced by a parliamentary official who said the Labour leader wrote in a letter that he was taking four of the party's 13 legislators with him into a new faction.Barak had been under pressure within Labour to press Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's right-leaning government to move more quickly towards an elusive peace agreement with the Palestinians. He also faced a future party leadership challenge.The inclusion of Labour in Netanyahu's administration broadened its political base and was widely seen as softening its right-wing image internationally.In a separate statement, Barak's deputy, Matan Vinai, said that leaving Labour would enable the new faction members to pursue peace "without a stopwatch.Political analysts said Barak was expected to remain in the coalition, but it was unclear whether Labour's eight remaining Parliament members would continue to support the government.Netanyahu currently has a 74-member majority in the 120-seat parliament including the Labour party.

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