Knesset candidates discuss issues at 'Jerusalem Post' election debate

Candidates from Likud, Zionist Union, Bayit Yehudi, Yesh Atid and other parties face off in Tel Aviv.

Jerusalem Post Election Debate
The Jerusalem Post hosted an election debate on Sunday featuring candidates from the leading parties less than two weeks before the March 17 Knesset elections are set to kick off.
The debate, entitled "Israel Navigating Economy and Civil Society," was hosted in conjunction with the Tel Aviv International Salon and the AACI and was held at Hangar 11 at the Tel Aviv Port.
 
Jerusalem Post Political Correspondent Gil Hoffman moderated the debate which featured Uri Zaki from Meretz, MK Merav Michaeli of the Zionist Union, MK Dov Lipman of Yesh Atid, former Israeli ambassador to the US Michael Oren of Kulanu, Ashley Perry of Yisrael Beytenu, Yoav Kish of Likud and Ronen Shoval of Bayit Yehudi.
“There are up to 300,000 Israelis whose mother tongue is English,” said the Post’s editor-in-chief Steve Linde. “This public is used to the culture of debates, and we’re honoring their request to hear in their native language from the candidates seeking their votes in the coming election.”
The Post debate series will continue on Monday in Ra’anana at Beit Knesset Ohel Ari, and March 10 in Beersheba at Ben-Gurion University Building 18 before culminating three days before Election Day on March 14 in the capital at the Jerusalem Great Synagogue.
According to Yesh Atid’s Lipman, the English-speaking population has grown to the size that it’s worth significant mandates in the Knesset.
“I believe that even though we do a very good job becoming integrated into Israeli society – and therefore there’s certainly no need for our own party or movement – the English-speaking public does have specific needs and also a specific perspective of Israel, both in terms of aliya and internal issues that affect them,” said Lipman. “Parties recognize that this is a population they can tap into and are, therefore, reaching out to them.”
Kulanu candidate Oren said that as someone who made aliya from the US as a lone soldier 40 years ago, he understands the problems and challenges immigrants from English-speaking countries face.
“The most difficult day for me as a lone soldier was the day I was discharged,” Oren said. “In Israel, there are thousands of olim from English-speaking countries, and it imperative to reach out to them to ensure that they don’t just choose to make Israel their home, but that they choose to stay here.”
Oren added: “Professional Hebrew ulpans, more absorption budget, support for lone soldiers – these are just some of the issues that we’re obliged to take on to assist the wonderful population that arrives here from English-speaking countries out of love of Israel and real Zionism. In the last few weeks, I’ve talked to many English-speaking Israelis at parlor meetings, and I’m happy that these debates are taking place. They’re an accessible forum for providing an introduction to the parties for the widest possible audience.”
Lipman expressed pride at having worked in the last Knesset for the English-speaking public as an MK.
“People were exposed to the benefit of having an English-speaking representative in the Knesset, and I think that English speakers are seeking that either in an actual candidate or in parties that will take care of the needs that they have,” he said. “And I’m very happy that this issue has risen to the fore and that parties recognize the need for that.”
To that end, Post editor Linde stressed the importance of the upcoming debates and urged English-speakers in the country to take advantage of the opportunity to hear the candidates debate the issues that most affect them in English.
“We’re calling on the English-speaking community to take part in one of the debates in order to be better informed leading up to this fateful Election Day,” he said, adding that members of the audience would be given an opportunity to ask questions of the candidates at the end of each debate.