CANDIDLY SPEAKING: Mounting election turmoil

Hopefully more will vote for the major parties and avoid subcontracting their votes to “centrist” parties whose leaders seek to be kingmakers.

Elections in Israel (photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
Elections in Israel
(photo credit: MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)
It is still several months until the elections and the current opinion polls, in all probability, will be far from an accurate reflection of how voters actually cast their ballots. But there is an indication that significant numbers, particularly younger people largely influenced by the media’s “anyone but Bibi” frenzy, feel alienated from the major parties and consider the so-called “centrist” parties “cool.”
This creates an atmosphere of chaos and uncertainty and provides enormous leverage for the “center” party leaders to extort concessions from the major parties and effectively determine the nature of the next government.
There is also fragmentation in the religious arena with Shas wracked by the schism between its leader, Aryeh Deri, and former head Eli Yishai, who has created a breakaway party. This could impact negatively on the national camp, especially if Yishai fails to achieve the threshold and the votes from his supporters are nullified.
The volatility of the election is highlighted by the looming electoral tsunami facing Avigdor Liberman’s party, Yisrael Beytenu. This is not only due to the extraordinary corruption scandal involving 30 of its key leaders and ministers, but more so because Liberman, the ultimate chameleon, seems to have misjudged and antagonized many of his core followers by his policy somersault and dovish lurch, adopting what he misleadingly describes as a “pragmatic national camp” approach. Not only has he alienated many of his traditional nationalist supporters, he has failed to attract new voters from the Left.
One year ago, Foreign Minister Liberman accused the Europeans of betraying Israel in a similar manner to their 1938 abandonment of Czechoslovakia.
Today in his new “centrist” mode, in simplistic demagogic terms he insists that to avoid sanctions, we must placate the Europeans even if that necessitates unilateral withdrawals. Moreover, Liberman, who threatened to bomb Aswan Dam and actually quit the Olmert government for conceding too much to the Palestinians, now proposes that we should bypass the Palestinians, make unilateral withdrawals, and consummate a deal with the moderate Arab states.
The foreign minister, who at the height of the Gaza war railed against his own government for not finishing off Hamas, also has the chutzpah to blame Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the erosion of US-Israel relations.
Many of Liberman’s traditional supporters are now recognizing that personal aggrandizement represents the sole motivation determining his bizarre zigzagging policies. The principal beneficiaries of fallout in Yisrael Beytenu are likely to be Likud, Bayit Yehudi and perhaps Moshe Kahlon’s Kulanu Party.
The two remaining “centrist” parties are also one-man bands whose leaders handpick the candidates and personally determine policies. Yair Lapid, who created Yesh Atid as a centrist party, has now lurched to the Left and absurdly proposes to achieve peace by bypassing the Palestinians and negotiating with the Arab League. He also calls for a unilateral withdrawal, highly reminiscent of Sharon’s disastrous Gaza disengagement. And at the same time, he cynically declares that he would now be willing to join a government that includes haredim (ultra-Orthodox), despite his former haredi phobia. All indicators suggest that, at best, Yesh Atid will retain half its current Knesset seats and while nothing is impossible in Israeli politics, it seems destined to ally with Isaac Herzog’s Labor Party.
The most unpredictable group is Kahlon’s Kulanu.
Aside from statements castigating the economy and social inequality, which Kahlon anticipates will provide the core of his electoral support, he has until now maintained a low profile. Kahlon, when serving as a Likud cabinet minister, was a hawk, bitterly opposed to withdrawals and even fiercely condemning the creation of a Palestinian state. Now he hints about a need for greater flexibility and territorial concessions. Last week, he appointed Michael Oren, former ambassador to the US, as the foreign policy expert in his team. Oren is critical of Netanyahu for failing to take diplomatic initiatives and calls for unilateral withdrawal from much of the West Bank.
Current opinion polls indicate Herzog’s Labor is neck to neck with Likud in terms of primary voters.
If he tops Likud, that would theoretically give him the initial opportunity of horse trading with the “centrist” parties to form a government.
Both Herzog and his designated alternate prime minister Tzipi Livni have based their campaign on condemning Netanyahu for failing to promote the peace process with Abbas, destroying the relationship between Israel and the US and neglecting the economy. However, in an extraordinarily frank interview with Roger Cohen of The New York Times, last week Livni totally repudiated the central theme of her campaign, namely that Netanyahu was responsible for the breakdown in negotiations with Abbas. She explicitly accused the Palestinian leadership of “causing the failure” of the American-sponsored peace negotiations “at a critical moment.”
Livni told Cohen that on March 17, 2014, Palestinian Authority head Mahmoud Abbas had been presented with a framework, drafted by the Americans, which encompassed borders, security and settlements, which she “considered a fair framework, and Netanyahu was willing to proceed on the basis of it while saying he had reservations.” Livni claimed that Abbas “declined to give an answer” and she described how she was stunned, when watching television, to see “Abbas signing letters as part of a process to join 15 international agencies.”
Shortly after that, Abbas announced the PA merger with Hamas. Subsequently Abbas refused to give any undertakings about maintaining ongoing negotiations, the Israelis refused to release the final batch of terrorists and so the talks collapsed. Livni says she then told Abbas in London, “The choice is not between everything and nothing. And your choice in the end was to get nothing.”
That Livni, potentially an alternative prime minister, remained silent on this issue while the Obama administration blamed Israel for the breakdown in negotiations, was unconscionable. It is even more outrageous that to this day she continues to blame Netanyahu for the breakdown in the peace talks with the Palestinians.
Ultimately, voters will have to choose between two leaderships. Either a coalition of the national camp headed by Netanyahu including Bayit Yehudi, some of the “centrist” parties and the haredim, or, alternatively, a government led by Herzog and Livni which would probably include Meretz, Yesh Atid some of the “centrist” parties – and the haredim, who will sell themselves to the highest bidder.
For most Israelis, neither coalition would be ideal, but they face a clear choice between a government of the national camp headed by Netanyahu, including some radical right-wing groups, or a left-wing government led by Herzog-Livni that would include considerable numbers of delusional leftists committed to promoting further unilateral withdrawals, notwithstanding Hamas gaining control of any areas vacated by the IDF.
I have spoken to younger voters, who have no illusions about the lack of peace partner and are convinced that the peace process will go nowhere, no matter who forms the government. They are inclined to vote for “centrist” parties which they believe can impact social issues. What they do not appreciate is that even if there are no current prospects for achieving peace, the messages transmitted by the next government will have long-lasting impact. Indeed in retrospect, the failure of the peace process can largely be attributed to the irresponsible offers of the Olmert government, which despite being rejected by Abbas, was exploited by the Palestinians who insisted that they represent the opening benchmark for future negotiations.
Regrettably much of the international community has endorsed this, encouraging the Palestinians to remain intransigent and relentlessly continue their efforts to undo Israel in stages.
There will undoubtedly be further ups and downs as the election fever grows and most Israelis determine which of these camps they intend supporting.
However, hopefully more will vote for the major parties and avoid subcontracting their votes to “centrist” parties whose leaders seek to be kingmakers and determine the nature of the government based solely on personal interests.
Isi Leibler’s website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com.