JERUSALEM — With 92 percent of votes counted in the Israeli general election on Tuesday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in the lead, but it was still far from certain whether he would win enough seats to form a majority government and end a year of political stasis.

Mr. Netanyahu’s right-wing and religious bloc was projected to win 59 seats — just five more than that of his main rival, the centrist former army chief Benny Gantz, but still two short of a majority.

The full implications of the election remain uncertain, because the votes yet to be counted could affect the balance of power in Parliament. Here’s what we know so far.

Israel’s political system is still in a logjam.

If the results stand, no bloc has enough seats for a majority in Parliament, not even Mr. Netanyahu’s. All eyes are on Avigdor Liberman, the leader of an unaligned ultranationalist party that now holds the balance of power.