The never-ending elections
10/13/2012 22:44
In the upcoming elections there are many unknowns that could still affect the end result – ranging from the weather on polling day to the ongoing security situation.
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu calls early elec Photo: Marc Israel Sellem
‘In Israeli politics, there is the Left side, the Right side and suicide,”
decorated war hero Avigdor Kahalani once quipped. His Third Way party entered
the Knesset in 1996; he made the joke a few years later, when it became apparent
that he and his faction members would soon find themselves back on the outside
of the splendid wrought-iron Palombo Gate that marks the entrance to the Israeli
parliament.
On election night 1996, as supporters doused him in champagne
from Golan Heights wineries, he enthused: “Friends, there is a third way; a
group of nice people with principles who didn’t badmouth anybody did it. We
showed them that there is another way...”
As you can see, it didn’t take
long before Kahalani realized that being nice and principled is not necessarily
the easiest way to get elected and it’s certainly not the easiest way to stay in
power. And that, in Israel, centrist parties have been doomed to come and go,
like the bubbles that give champagne its sparkle but quickly lose their taste
once the bottle has been opened. That's not to say that there's no place for
principles and decency, of course, but naivety (political or otherwise) is not a
good leadership quality.
It is one of the twists of Israeli fate, by the
way, that Kahalani’s party – if it is remembered at all – is recalled for its
insistent struggle to keep Israeli sovereignty in the Golan Heights (hence the
origins of the bubbly). The party was formed as a breakaway from Labor at a time
when Yitzhak Rabin dismissed the residents there as “spinning propellers” and
promised a pullback in return for peace with Syria.
I recall Kahalani
leading a tour of Jewish communities in Gaza seeking their support for remaining
on the Golan. In a week like last week, in which some 50 missiles rained down on
the South of the country from the now Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, and with
Syria’s Bashar Assad slaughtering his own citizens in spitting distance from
Israeli communities in the North, it is hard to say whether the memory is bitter
or sweet.
The elections of 1996 were among the most dramatic, even by
Israeli standards. The circumstances were tragic – the Oslo Accords were blowing
up all around us and Rabin had been brutally assassinated. Like most Israeli
citizens, I went to sleep late that election night convinced that Shimon Peres
had won (as the exit polls predicted) and woke up to find that Binyamin
Netanyahu had beaten him after all.
It was first time that I fully took
in the meaning of the phrase “It ain’t over ’til it’s over.” It’s a phrase
former Kadima head Tzipi Livni should have kept in mind during the last general
elections, almost four years ago. While she sang her own praises in a
victory speech, I wasn’t the only one who realized that she was not the
proverbial fat lady and she might have won a battle, but she had not won the
war.
In the upcoming elections, too, there are many unknowns that could
still affect the end result – ranging from the weather on polling day to the
ongoing security situation. There is also the crucial question (from Netanyahu’s
point of view) of what Defense Minister Ehud Barak decides to do with his
minuscule breakaway Independence party and whether former politicians Livni,
Ehud Olmert and Arye Deri decide to rejoin the race: Livni despite feeling
slighted by the Kadima party which ousted her from leadership; Olmert despite
his recent conviction for breach of trust and ongoing legal struggles over the
Holyland Affair; and Deri, who can legally return to politics even though he is
one of the far-from-exclusive club of former parliamentarians and ministers who
have served time in office and served time in prison. I’ve lost count of how
many elections have taken place with pundits questioning what will happen if
Yisrael Beytenu leader Avigdor Liberman’s many investigations ever end in an
indictment. (When I’m in a particularly “on the bright side of things” mood, I
do think that I’m fortunate to be living in a country that is cracking down on
political corruption and whose former politicians are not convicted on political
grounds.)
Also in the “you never know” category is Peres’s current position as
president, with the ability to determine who will form the next
government. That’s Peres who as a politician gained a name as a perennial
loser. Nonetheless, having covered more than one election campaign for
the Post, I can hear him commenting that “the ballot is better than the bullet”
even before he actually says it. And I agree with him.
One of my
quirkiest election memories is coming across a young man scraping a pro-Peres
sticker off a parked car. Summoning a sense of self-righteousneous and not a
little courage, I politely pointed out: “You can’t do that.” “Why not?” came the
slightly obstreperous-sounding reply. “Because it’s not right, whatever
your political beliefs,” I countered. “But it’s my car,” came the convincing end
to the discussion. I still regret that I was too stunned to think of asking why
he had decided to remove the sticker.
Every election is different; every
election is the same. The difference this time will probably lie in the
socio-economic platforms. Under Shelly Yacimovich, Labor is definitely
interested in promoting the issues that came to the fore in the social protests
of the summer of 2011. For all Netanyahu proclaimed that he called the (slightly
early) elections in order to pass a “responsible budget with long-range vision”
and that “the State of Israel would prefer a short election campaign of three
months over what, in effect, would be a long election campaign that would
continue for an entire year and would severely damage the Israeli economy,” the
wheeling and dealing will undoubtedly take place. Whether it’s the extraordinary
“combinot” that the national budget can produce before elections or the delicate
coalition building process that inevitably follows, promises will be made and
paid for (or broken).
This is what Livni failed to understand last time:
In the Israeli system, it’s not enough to head the party that gains the largest
number of votes, you have to lead the party with the best chance of creating a
stable coalition.
This is what Netanyahu – who earned his nickname The
Magician for his political juggling skills – knows very well. Hence he not only
took the trouble to create as broad a coalition as possible during the run-up to
the last elections, but he also called these elections with one eye on Iran and
security but the other very firmly on the state of his possible rivals for
premiership.
In the background is not only the boom of intermittent
missiles but also the likely fallout of the economic measures he describes as
essential to avoid “the situation of the crumbling economies of
Europe.”
I predict that much of the electioneering this time will be
carried out via the social media (which is about as much as I am willing to
predict). And I’m willing to venture that as soon as the elections are over, the
politicians will get down to, well, politics; the ordinary citizens will
continue to complain; and there will be much talk of changing the electoral
system – as much a tradition as going to the polls. The astute will realize that
the elections don’t end when all the ballots have been counted; that simply
marks the countdown to the next round. This is the case in all democratic
countries. Israelis don’t have to look very far to see that it could be
worse.
The writer is editor of The International Jerusalem
Post.
liat@jpost.com