Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
The Israeli Political Game: Nobody Is
Trusted
By Uri AvneryAl-Jazeerah, CCUN, January 1, 2013
A Person Called Nobody SUDDENLY, I
realized that a new star had appeared on the political firmament of
Israel. Until yesterday I did not even know of its existence. A
respected public opinion poll posed a Nixonesque question: From which
politician would you buy a used car? The answer was stunning: not a single
politician reached the mark of even 10%. Except one who would be trusted
by a massive 34% of potential voters: a certain Nobody. This was
not the only question to which the voters showed a marked preference for
this mysterious candidate. When asked with which candidate they would like
to spend an evening, only 5% preferred Shelly Yachimovitch, and even the
smooth Binyamin Netanyahu attracted only 20%, while Nobody easily headed
the list with 27%. Whom do you trust most? Again Nobody won with
22%, followed by Netanyahu with 18%. Who cares most for you and your
problems? 33% voted for Nobody, followed far behind by Shelly with 17% and
Netanyahu with only 9%. I have never met this Nobody. I don’t even
know whether he/she is young or old. Why did he/she not set up a new
party, seeing that it would be a shoo-in? Since it is too late to
enter the fray, it is absolutely certain that Netanyahu will be the great
victor. He will be the next Prime Minister. He simply has no competitor.
IN MANY languages, including Hebrew, one speaks of the
“political game”. But, as far as I know, nobody has yet devised a real
game, even for children. I have taken the trouble to do this now.
I hope that it will help some of my readers to wile away the time on a
dull evening when there is no “reality” show on the screen. The
game is on the lines of Lego. Each block represents one of the parties.
The aim is to set up a government coalition. Since the Knesset has
120 members, you need 61 to set up a government. You might feel safer with
65, at least, since a number of members are always carousing around abroad
and have to be frantically called home for critical votes. Israelis like
to travel around the world, especially if somebody else (like the Knesset)
pays for it. For creating a coalition, you should observe the
following principles: First, your own party must be strong enough
to overcome any possible opposition within the government itself.
Second, the coalition must be balanced, so that you will always be exactly
in the middle on any issue. Third, it must include enough members
so that no single party is big enough to blackmail you by threatening to
leave the government on the eve of a crucial vote.
Some unfortunate candidates for the prime ministership in the past have
found this job so hard that they had to ask the President of the State for
an extension of the time allotted to them by the law. Actually,
this is the most important of all decisions you will have to make until
the next elections, including decisions about wars and such. If you get it
wrong at this juncture, your government is sure to meet disaster somewhere
along the road. THE POLLS show that this time you will have a
comparatively easy job. It will depend on your abilities how successful
the outcome will be. First of all, the building blocks you have
to choose from. Your own list, Likud Beitenu, the one you set up
together with Avigdor Lieberman, is expected to gain between 35 and 40
seats. All other parties will be markedly smaller. There is no party
in the 20-35 seats range. Shelly’s Labor Party is hovering
between 15 and 20, competing with four parties between 9 and 15. These are
Tzipi Livni’s Movement (that’s actually its name, The Movement); Ya’ir
Lapid’s There is a Future (contrary to those who believed that the world
would end last week); the oriental-orthodox Shas and Naftali Bennett’s The
Jewish Home. Naftali Who? Bennett is the great surprise of these
elections. He appeared from nowhere, a successful high-tech entrepreneur
with a tiny kippa, who has managed a hostile takeover of the moribund
National-Religious party. He has succeeded in throwing out all its
venerable leaders and become the sole boss. Within a few weeks he has
doubled the party's share of the polls by outflanking Netanyahu on the
right and voicing opinions which some consider outright fascist.
Where does Bennett get his supporters from? From the Likud, of course.
Bennett was once Netanyahu’s office chief of staff, but made the fatal
mistake of running afoul of Sarah’le, the Boss’s wife (or, some say: the
real boss.) Now a furious battle is raging. Bennett accuses Netanyahu of
supporting the Two-State Solution (which nobody in Israel and the world
believes) and Netanyahu attacks Bennett for announcing that he, as a
soldier – a major in the reserves – would disobey an order to “remove a
Jew from his home” The “home” in question being, of course, a settlement
on Palestinian land. Since the Likud itself has become far more
extreme since the recent primary elections, and since the addition of
Lieberman’s cohorts makes it even righter, the looming confrontation with
Bennett will be a riveting fight between the Extreme Right and the More
Extreme Right. There is also a Most Extreme Right: the disciples of the
late unlamented Rabbi Meir Kahane, who, however, will probably not pass
the two-percent minimum hurdle. Coming back to the party lists:
apart from the Likud and the five “medium-sized” parties, there are six
small parties. The most important of these by far is the Ashkenazi
Orthodox bloc, Torah Jewry. Then there is Meretz, the only Jewish party
that admits to being left-wing. Of equal size are the three Arab parties
(including the Communists, who are mainly Arab but who also have a Jewish
candidate). And then there is poor Kadima, the largest party in the
outgoing Knesset which is now struggling to overcome the two-percent
curse. Sic transit gloria mundi. SO NOW you can set to work.
Remember: the aim is 61 members at least. The most natural
coalition would be an alliance of the Right. Likud-Beitenu, the Jewish
Home, Shas and the Orthodox will probably add up to around 67 seats. They
could implement the policy of rapidly expanding the settlements and
preventing the creation of a Palestinian state, keeping up the eternal
occupation and not giving a damn for world opinion. The drawback:
this composition would put an end to any pretense about your adherence to
the Two-State Solution and your desire for peace. You would stand naked
before the world. Israel’s international status would plummet, with
possible dire consequences. Also: you would be open to permanent
blackmail from the combined Shas-Orthodox block, which might demand huge
additional sums for its ghettos, such as higher subsidies for their
children (8-10 per family), exemption from work and military service and
much more. Also, you would not be located in the middle of your
government, but to the left. To prevent this, you might want to
add some centrist spice to the brew. At least three party leaders will
line up before your door the day after the election: Shelly, Tzipi and
Ya’ir. Formulating the next government’s program should pose no
problem. None of the three have said anything that could disturb you.
Actually, they have not said much about anything. So take your pick.
WHY NOT take all of them? That would make a National Union (always
popular), with only “the Arabs” and Meretz left outside. A coalition of
100 members. Ah, but there’s the rub. Two rubs, actually.
First, in such a coalition, you will be in a minority. You might not be
able to turn your every whim into law and zigzag happily along.
Second, how do you distribute the ministries? That, after all, will be the
main – if not the only – demand of all these leaders, as well as your own
party functionaries. There will be at least three candidates for
Defense, four for the Treasury, two for the Foreign Office (unless the
courts send Lieberman to prison.) So here the real game starts.
Which party to include, which to exclude? Do you take Shelly and
leave Bennett outside? Or perhaps include Ya’ir and exclude Shas (teach
them a lesson, alright!) Or let Tzipi in, as an alibi for those
troublesome Americans and Europeans and prevent the ” de-legitimization”
of Israel, and forget about Shelly, who says she loves the settlers?
As you see, the possibilities are almost infinite. You have 25 days to go.
Enjoy the game - and the best of luck!
|
|
|