It was a coincidence that last Friday The Jerusalem Post published a poll asking
Israelis whom they would vote in the next Knesset election – the first Smith
Research survey sponsored by this newspaper in which that question was asked
since before the last general election in February 2009.
Friday night,
Channel 2 broke the story that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was seriously
considering advancing the next general election to as early as August. That
report may have been intended as a trial balloon, but within a few days the
entire political establishment got carried away, and a September 4 election was
set.
Advisers to Netanyahu sounded well-versed in the results of the Post
poll, citing them without even being prompted. The poll, like others published
this week, found that the Likud would win more than twice as many mandates as
any other party.
But his advisers insisted that Netanyahu had initiated
the election not because of any survey but because he genuinely could no longer
put up with his coalition partners’ threats to violate coalition discipline and
act increasingly independently. They said he would have loved to hold the
election on time on October 22, 2013, but his political allies left him no
choice but to initiate the race now and seek four more years in
office.
“The threats had become intolerable,” one adviser said. “Bibi is
not a kindergarten teacher and he did not want to endure a year and a half of
political extortion. He is the last one who has to be afraid of elections.”
Netanyahu’s advisers refused to single out one coalition partner as being
especially problematic.
But there was no doubt that the prime minister
was particularly vexed by the behavior of Foreign Minister Avigdor
Liberman.
At a pre-Passover toast Liberman hosted at Jerusalem’s Shalom
Hotel on April 3, he complained about the lack of progress in finding an
alternative to the Tal Law to facilitate drafting yeshiva students to the IDF
and about Defense Minister Ehud Barak’s handling of outposts.
“We don’t
want elections now for a thousand reasons, but if someone thinks we are hostages
because of coalition agreements and because of my legal procedures, they are
mistaken,” Liberman said. “We expect decisive decisions to be made and not
further stalling.”
While Netanyahu said in multiple interviews that he
wanted to last an entire term and he did not intend to initiate elections, that
same day he started adding a caveat that he was not sure whether his coalition
partners would take steps to overthrow him and cause elections sooner than he
would want.
The prime minister intended the caveat as a warning to his
coalition partners to get back in line or risk initiating an election that could
help him and harm them. Perhaps they should have taken that warning to heart,
knowing that with polls looking so good for Netanyahu, he might be seeking any
excuse to advance the election and blame it on them.
But Liberman only
upgraded his threats, pronouncing himself no longer obligated by coalition
agreements and only committed to his voters in a Channel 2 interview Saturday
night. Liberman’s statement was taken out of context in headlines. He did not
mean it as an immediate threat to leave but as a way of emphasizing how
important it was to pass his party’s alternative to the Tal
Law.
Netanyahu immediately called Liberman’s bluff, and the process of
initiating an election snowballed the rest of the week, not even stopping while
the prime minister buried his father Benzion and sat shiva.
Whether the
early election is good or bad for Liberman is not a function of polls, most of
which show his Yisrael Beytenu party maintaining its current 15 seats. It
depends on what Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein intended to do had the
election not forced him to put the conclusion of his investigation of Liberman
on corruption charges on hold until after the race.
There had been leaks
that Weinstein might decide not to indict Liberman after all, freeing him from
the overlapping criminal investigations that have plagued his entire 13-year
political career. Perhaps if Netanyahu would have waited even a few more months,
he would have faced off against a Liberman unencumbered by the cloud of a
pending indictment in a contest for votes among their right-wing political base.
If Netanyahu does as well in the election as polls currently indicate, perhaps
he should go straight from the traditional victory visit to the Western Wall to
the site worshiped by the secular Left: the Supreme Court.
The court’s February 21 ruling that the Tal Law was unconstitutional (10 years
after it passed) and had to be replaced by August 1 created an artificial
confrontation between Yisrael Beytenu and the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) parties.
If Netanyahu needed for there to be a crack in his otherwise stable coalition,
he finally had one.
“If someone wants an election in 2012, it will have
to be connected to the Tal Law,” coalition chairman Ze’ev Elkin accurately
predicted in a February 9 interview with the Post, 12 days before the Supreme
Court ruling.
“Bibi can go to an election over drafting haredim because
he can form a government without them and the Left cannot. Or better yet, he
could let the haredim topple the government, which would give him a good card to
play in the race.”
In their efforts to persuade Netanyahu to initiate an
election, his advisers cited the split in the Center-Left among Labor, Kadima,
and former journalist Yair Lapid’s new Yesh Atid party. New Kadima leader Shaul
Mofaz’s failure to rise in the polls made it an especially ripe time for
Netanyahu to hold the race.
The advisers cautioned Netanyahu against
waiting too long, advising him that both he and the Israeli economy have reached
their peak and can only go down, while the cost of living and unemployment would
rise.
The prime minister also preempted socioeconomic protests that are
expected this summer.
As with any decision by Netanyahu on anything, a
key factor is Iran. On one hand, Netanyahu would have wanted to keep Ehud Barak
as his defense minister, which would apparently require delaying an election
that is likely to end Barak’s political career. But on the other hand, if a
military strike is in the offing, it makes sense to hold the election first – in
case anything goes wrong with such a sensitive maneuver.
Holding the race
in September will enable the winner of the race to form a new coalition before
the November 6 election in the United States. If one assumes that the US would
want to wait until after their election before considering such a strike, it
would be good to have the Israeli government in place by then.
But
Netanyahu’s advisers said the identity of the winner of the US election was not
a factor in deciding to move up Israel’s. They confirmed that in the past they
had advised Netanyahu to initiate an election before US President Barack Obama
has the chance to get reelected, due to fears that if Obama did not have to
worry about losing Jewish votes, he could interfere in the Israeli race and harm
Netanyahu as US presidents have in the past.
Why do the advisers no
longer consider Obama a problem? Have personal relations between the president
and Netanyahu improved? Not really.
The reason they say Obama is no
longer a factor is that public opinion of the US president has improved in
Israel. Their source? Last Friday’s Jerusalem Post poll.
The poll found
that the percentage of Israelis who believe that Obama’s administration leans
toward the Palestinians is equal to the percentage who think it favors
Israel.
So, at least in that respect, The Jerusalem Post played a role in
Netanyahu’s decision after all.
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