Mishael Kinkulkin, right, and a friend, Tirtza Ben-Zvi, drink
coffee in Machane Yehuda market, Jerusalem. Photograph : Quique
Kierszenbaum for the Observer
**
One end is a Jewish settlement across the Green Line, the other is
close to Israel’s haunting memorial to the victims of the Holocaust, Yad
Vashem. In between, Jerusalem’s light railway travels through
Palestinian districts, skirts ultra-orthodox enclaves, grazes the
ancient walls of the Old City, turns along historic Jaffa Street, passes
the chaotic and colourful shuk, or market, crosses the stunning Bridge
of Strings at the city’s entrance and heads up to Mount Herzl, where
Israel’s fallen soldiers are laid to rest. It is an emblematic, as well
as a literal, journey through the city.
Inside its sleek carriages is a microcosm of Jerusalem’s complex
population : every degree of Jewishness from bare-headed secular to
black-hatted ultra-orthodox, Palestinians, khaki-clad soldiers, recent
Russian immigrants, tourists and pilgrims. It seems appropriate,
following last week’s announcement of a general election in January, to
take the political pulse of the city along the artery of the light
railway.
"Bibi’s going to win," shrugs Ran Huri, using incumbent prime
minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s nickname. "He’s charismatic and he has the
courage to say what he means. And most people in Israel are rightists."
The 26-year-old, who is waiting for a train in the settlement of Pisgat
Ze’ev, plans to vote for the small pro-settler Jewish Home party – but,
like others, he views Netanyahu’s victory as inevitable. "There’s no
one better than him," says Shmuel Moshe, minding his pitzutzia – a small
shop selling cigarettes, spirits and lottery cards – near the light
railway’s tracks. "There’s no one who can beat him. Anyone else will
destroy the country."
"Bibi’s on 33% and Shelly Yacimovich [his nearest rival] is on 20%.
It’s difficult to believe that gap will change," says Mishael Kinkulkin,
a 20-year-old soldier drinking coffee in the shuk with his assault
rifle across his lap. "I’ll vote Labour because I believe in helping the
weakest part of society, but at the end of the day the hottest issue is
always security. And that’s why Bibi will win."
"For sure, Likud [Netanyahu’s party] will take it. There’s no one
else, only Netanyahu. Bibi is a good economist, and is tough on
security," said Yaakov Halima, 79, an Iraqi-born Jew, who has voted
Likud at every election for 60 years. "Security is the most important
issue. There’s no one dying from hunger here, everyone has a bit."
Istavsky Yvgenia, 56, a Russian immigrant, says she knows nothing
about politics and has not made up her mind who to vote for. "But Bibi
will win," she says, pulling her shopping trolley on to the train on her
way to the market.
Polls reinforce the views of these random Jerusalemites. Israel
Hayom, a giveaway newspaper owned by US casino magnate Sheldon Adelson
(who is also Republican candidate Mitt Romney’s principal bankroller)
predicted that Likud would get 29 out of 120 seats in parliament. The
party’s nearest rival, Labour, was forecast to win 20, Avigdor
Lieberman’s Yisrael Beiteinu 15, with smaller parties trailing behind. A
survey in Haaretz gave 68 seats to the rightwing bloc. On personal
ratings, Netanyahu had the backing of 57% of voters – more than twice
that of his nearest rival.
According to Tamar Hermann of the Open University of Israel :
"Netanyahu is the only leader on the horizon. There is no other figure
on Israel’s political scene equal to him in experience, capability and
clarity of views." Furthermore, she adds, he is a hardliner on security.
He looks almost certain to lead another coalition government, the
result of Israel’s electoral system of proportional representation. "The
balance between the left and right blocs will stay more or less the
same, there’s no real movement," says Avraham Diskin, a political
scientist at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University.
On the left, Labour has made some recovery after a decade of
infighting, but its leader, former journalist Shelly Yacimovich, is seen
as inexperienced, especially on security, defence and foreign affairs.
She has shifted the party’s focus away from the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process to the social and economic issues voters say rank high in
their concerns. Polls predict Labour could win 17 seats compared with
its current eight. Meretz, to the left of Labour, and Hadash, an
Arab-Jewish communist party, are each forecast to win three or four
seats.
The demise of the left, which dominated Israeli governments for 30
years after the creation of the state, is due to "a plethora of
reasons", says Hermann. She cites the collapse of the peace process, the
identification of the left with the "old elite" of Jews of European
heritage, the influx of Russian immigrants who "dislike anything
’pinkish’", and the resentment of Mizrahi Jews – originating from the
Middle East and North Africa – who "see the left as responsible for
their socio-economic isolation". According to Anshel Pfeffer, writing in
Haaretz, the "moribund" left has also isolated itself. "Their voices of
conscience, such as authors Amos Oz and David Grossman, have no
influence beyond their little bubbles of the already converted."
The centre ground of Israeli politics is also struggling to challenge
Netanyahu’s hegemony. Kadima – the party formed by former prime
minister Ariel Sharon after he broke from Likud – has gone into
freefall. In the 2009 election, it emerged as the biggest party with 28
seats, but was unable to form a coalition government. Polls last week
predicted it would probably slump to a catastrophic seven seats in
January’s election.
A new party, Yesh Atid, led by former TV presenter Yair Lapid, could
make headway, perhaps winning around 17 seats. Its policies are largely
unknown, but it is likely to position itself on the centre-right and
some predict it will join Netanyahu as a coalition partner.
Its place in the polls is attributed to the appeal of its urbane
leader. "Now the leader of a party is of prime importance," says
Hermann. "In the past it used to be ideology and party loyalty. This is a
process of the Americanisation of Israeli politics in the past 10 years
or so."
Two issues are expected to dominate the three-month election
campaign : the economy and security. Last summer saw protests in Israel
over food prices, house prices and the cost of raising a family. "In the
past, security was top of the list," says Hermann. "Socio-economic
issues were further down. Now they are on an equal footing with
security."
Security, for Netanyahu, primarily means Iran’s nuclear programme.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is not expected to be a significant
factor. Many Israelis are content with the current situation of relative
calm and do not dwell on Israel’s 45-year occupation. Diskin says Iran
will trump all other issues. "Netanyahu believes there is a real threat.
And when there’s an external threat, people unite and move to the
right."
In Mahane Yehuda market, shopkeeper Abraham Levy, 63, considers
Netanyahu’s record. "Is he a good prime minister ? Not 100% on the
economy. The lowest parts of society have suffered a lot … People wait
until the end of the day to buy, when prices go down. But on security,
he’s great. He’s tough on the Palestinians, and he is the one to deal
with Iran. I’ve always voted Likud, and I will vote for them again."
(Harriet Sherwood The Observer, 14 October 2012 )
Lancé le 19 décembre 2011, "Si Proche Orient" est un blog d'information internationale. Sa mission est de couvrir l’actualité du Moyen-Orient et de l'Afrique du Nord avec un certain regard et de véhiculer partout dans le monde un point de vue pouvant amener au débat. "Si Proche Orient" porte sur l’actualité internationale de cette région un regard fait de diversité des opinions, de débats contradictoires et de confrontation des points de vue.Il propose un décryptage approfondi de l’actualité .
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