Rightwing and neo-liberal Israeli P. M. Benjamin Netanyahu, suffered a
major setback in Israel’s general election on Tuesday as results gave
the narrowest of victories for the rightwing-religious block and a
surprisingly strong showing for a new centrist party formed last year,
forcing the prime minister to say he will seek a "broad coalition to
govern Israel." Netanyahu remains on course to continue as prime
minister, as his rightwing electoral alliance, Likud-Beiteinu, is the
biggest party after winning 31 of 120 seats in the next parliament. But
it was a sharp drop from the present combined total of 42 for the two
parties.
With 99% of the votes counted from yesterday’s election for the 19th
Knesset, the left-center and right-religious blocks are evenly matched
at 60 seats each. The joint Likud-Beytnenu list, led by Netanyahu and
Ivette (Avigdor) Liberman, has plummeted from 42 seats in the outgoing
Knesset to 31 seats. The big gainer is political newcomer Yair Lapid,
whose Yesh Atid party is on 19 seats. The voter turnout was 66.6%, 1.4%
higher than in the 2009 election, but lower than seemed likely at the
earlier stages of voting yesterday. Labor has 15 seats (compared with 13
in the outgoing Knesset) ; Habayit Hayehudi, under Naftali Bennett, 11
seats (7) ; Shas 11 seats (11) ; Meretz 6 seats (3) ; Tzipi Livni’s
Hatenuah 6 seats (-) ; United Torah Judaism 7 seats (5) ; Hadash 4 seats
(4) ; Ra’am-Ta’al 4 seats (4) ; National Democratic Assembly - Balad 3
seats (3). Fascist and racist Otzma L’Israel will have no representative
in the Knesset.
Hadash chairman, MK Muhammad Barakeh urged centrist Yesh Atid and the
left to stand with Arab parties to thwart Netanyahu. "We have the
opportunity to create a bloc – center, left, and Arabs," he declared
Tuesday night. "The time has come," added MK Dov Khenin (Hadash), "This
could be an historic opportunity to replace the extreme-right regime
that has trampled democracy." They called on party heads on the center,
the left and Arab parties to "create a bloc to block the extremist Bibi,
in order to preserve democratic spaces, to fight racism and struggle
occupation." But the basic problem to create a bloc is that the
Jewish-Zionist parties of the left or center have never been willing to
form a coalition with the non-Zionist Hadash and Arab parties, even form
a bloc or a minority coalition relying on their votes. According to MK
Barakeh : "Without Hadash and the Arab parties, there is no chance that
the Center-Left can form a government on its own. That automatically
weakens its hand in coalition negotiations."
Furthermore, the Jewish-Zionist Center-Left is currently splintered into
two major parties (Labor and Yesh Atid, with 15-19 seats each) and two
smaller parties (Meretz and Hatnua, with 6-7 each). Netanyahu can pick
off parts of this bloc at his convenience. So Netanyahu and Lapid should
get along fine. Likud-Beitenu, Habayit Hayehudi (a hard-right party
much strengthened by the elections) and Yesh Atid will have a majority
of seats in the Knesset. To increase stability they include might the
ultra-Orthodox and right-wing Shas party.
And what about the Israeli-Palestinian issue and the occupation ?
According to Hadash there is little expectation on either side of
significant movement on the Israeli-Palestinian issue and to put an end
to the occupation. Despite paying lip-service to the principle of two
states for two people, Netanyahu has done almost nothing to advance it
as a reality. In fact, accelerated settlement expansion has come very
close to killing off the two-state solution for good.
The election was triggered when the neo-liberal coalition government
failed to agree a budget. Last week it was disclosed that the deficit
had ballooned to 39bn shekels (roughly 1bn dollars), almost double the
forecast, because occupation and attempts to attack Iran. Among the
"austerity measures" the new right and center government will have to
consider are tax increases, raising VAT, reductions to child allowances,
and public sector cuts. According to MK Khenin : "The government will
be keen to avoid a return of the massive ’social justice’ protests
across the country 18 months ago."
(23 janvier 2013 - Communist Party of Israel)
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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