On the eve of elections

2009 February 4
by Alex

For the first time in my life, I’m about to cast a vote that really counts. My excuses for my apathy towards Britain’s first-past-the-post system no longer apply; Israel’s pure system of proportional representation means that my voice can indeed make a difference. With this responsibility, though, come a number of tough dilemmas. Is it a choice between Tzipi and Bibi? Are all the leading candidates broadly similar? Is it right to pretend I am voting for Prime Minister, while ignoring the rest of the names on the party list? Should I ignore the race for the top and focus on strengthening a smaller party? All these questions remain unanswered, which is why I remain – even this later in the day – an undecided voter. 

A few months ago I was a Livni supporter, and I’ve even done an ickle bit of campaigning for her. This commitment emerged from literal waking nightmares about Bibi returning as Prime Minister, a deeply felt sense of tragedy that America was voting Obama just as we were about to vote for Bush. In short, I felt the stars were finally aligning. Over the last two years Livni has demonstrated her commitment to the diplomatic path with the PA, a path that would be spurred on by unprecedented goodwill from the international community should she be elected. Or at least that was my assumption. Moreover, there is something refreshingly down-to-earth about her, and she seems to be free from the stain of corruption that has blotted the career of so many of her counterparts.

Doubts set in during Operation Cast Lead. She didn’t do a good job in front of the foreign media, and was far too gung-ho about Israel’s war aims, making absurd claims about toppling Hamas, claims that couldn’t possibly be fulfilled. Even since the ‘ceasefire’ she’s continued down this path, demanding that Israel go in hard after every rocket fire, walking into the trap set for her by Barak, according to which everything she says will be characterized as lacking experience. I know that she’s caught in a bind: sexism has characterized both of the other candidates’ attacks on her, and she’s damned if she does and damned if she’s doesn’t. Plus I’m aware she’s electioneering. But there’s been something quite ugly about her rhetoric in recent week, an ugliness that has significantly curbed my enthusiasm. 

Barak will be Barak. Whatever’s good for him will be promoted like the greatest policy in the world. With Bibi and Livni sloshing it out to prove who’s the toughest, he’s suddenly holding court at Ben Gurion University about building a tunnel between the West Bank and Gaza. I’m familiar with all this, yet have still been relatively impressed with his performance over the last few weeks, particularly since the ‘end’ of hostilities in Gaza. I’m not impressed enough, however, to give him my vote. He had his chance, and I see no compelling reason why he should be given another.

The same applies to Bibi. He’s transparently an awful guy, but politically he’s not quite as bad as they all say. The truth is he has no strategic plan towards the Palestinians. He talks up his idea of economic peace like the messiah’s on his way, but without offering political hope it will amount to nothing. At the same time, though, I don’t think there’s any reason to fear some kind of major settlement expansion. While he stands at the head of what is essentially a far-right party, he’s also the one Israeli leader most in thrall of American power. For all the rhetoric, he knows when to be subservient, and I wouldn’t be surprised to see some sort of surprise withdrawal – albeit ultimately of a symbolic kind – during his reign.

So how might the winning coalition shape up? The irony is that Bibi would probably bring in Labor while Livni may yet end up sitting down with Lieberman. While some polls optimistically show Livni edging out Bibi, none of them show the left-wing drop defeating the right-wing bloc (the Arab parties, of course, remain in limbo). I don’t see how Livni can form a coalition without bringing in either Shas or Yisrael Beitenu. We saw what happened when she tried to play nice with Eli Yishai and co back in November, and there’s no reason to think that anything will change this time around. Which leaves Lieberman. Amidst all the justified furor over his remarks about oaths and Israeli-Arabs, it’s easy to forget that he’s not fundamentally opposed to a large-scale withdrawal from the West Bank, or indeed to a Palestinian state. He also has to deliver on civil marriages, which suddenly puts him in bed with the left. Bibi has not yet managed to work out how to play Lieberman, who seems to be pinching votes off him right to the last. Plus Bibi wants a broad-based coalition, to try and show the world they’ve got nothing to worry about.

In some ways, then, a vote for Livni is a vote for Lieberman. One of the big reasons I’m turned off the major parties is their support of the bill to ban Balad and Raam Taal from the elections. The Supreme Court may have overruled this decision, but the damage had already been done. Needless to say, Lieberman supported this measure and then some. Israeli politics is a dirty game, of course, and it’s to be expected that people will engage in some particularly dramatic swinging. For me to vote for Livni now, though, given all of the above, I’d have to be really convinced that she’s going to make the breakthrough with the Palestinians. On this, I’m still to be convinced.

Of course, my most natural bedfellows are Meretz-Yachad, but they remain too elitist, and I can’t stand Amos Oz playing Ovadia Yosef to the café-dwellers. Which leaves Meimad-Yeruka, an intriguing hybrid of environmentalism and liberal orthodoxy. They first caught my eye in Umm-el-Fahm, when a long time Arab Hadash voter told me he was considering switching his allegiances to the new boys. Their central contention is that the environment is the only issue which can actually unite the whole country, and it’s with this banner that they’re trying to win over voters from across the ethnic and political divide. They’re not bound to the old ideological assumptions, and their presence in an increasingly stagnant political arena is refreshing. The question is will they pass their threshold, or will supporting them be a wasted vote?

These are my dilemmas. I’m not sure I’ll solve them until I find myself in the booth. In the meantime, advice from the esteemed readership of falsedi is actively encouraged…

34 Comments leave one →
2009 February 4
Avram permalink

“We saw what happened when she tried to play nice with Eli Yishai and co back in November, and there’s no reason to think that anything will change this time around. ”

I’ve read a few articles now saying Shas’s real reason for walking away from Livni wasn’t the kizba’aot, but the fact she wanted to split Jerusalem as per Olmert’s plan. Shas was always opposed to that and I guess they stood by their words.

Re: Economic Peace. I think it can work IF there is a ‘two state solution’ straight afterwards. I don’t think Bibi is thinking that far ahead and that, in my opinion, will make the plan likely to fail.

Otherwise, interesting post.

2009 February 4
Bob permalink

The reason that I’m voting for Green Movement/Meimad is that they have a vision for the future of Israel that focuses on improving the educational system, cleaning the environment, increasing public transportation and and working for social equality. If everyone that believes in this vision, then votes for Green Movement/Meimad, it will become a reality. Be courageous, and vote with your heart!

2009 February 4

So, you did not even mention Hadash as one of the options! Did you have a chance to read the interview with Dov Khenin in Haaretz? Or seen Generation Dov blog? To me, Hadash is the only true Arab-Jewish coexistence party in Israel today.

2009 February 4

Avram – I’m dubious as to those claims. I wrote about the issue at the time; see if you can dig it up.

Peter D – if I had been living in TA at the time of the mayoral elections, I would have voted for Khenin, but I’m afraid Hadash are probably still just a tad too radical for me right now. Maybe one day…

2009 February 4

“Amos Oz playing Ovadia Yosef to the café-dwellers.” Great line, sums up so much about Israeli politics in so few words.

2009 February 4

Thank you LB…

2009 February 4
Avram permalink

“To me, Hadash is the only true Arab-Jewish coexistence party in Israel today.”

To Magnes too!

Alex, what are up with all these icons new icons by our names?

2009 February 4

Avram – no idea; probably experiments from the falsedi tech team…

2009 February 4

Alex,

A vote for the Ichud Leumi (National Union) is a vote for true peace. Regardless of what every other party is hedging or promoting, the facts on the ground are untenable for either two-state or multi-national state solutions for peace. The NU party, led by the highly respected Yaakov Katz, promotes the plan of humane arab resettlement, which is the only legitimate win/win solution for both Jews and arabs alike.

It’s also not a wasted vote, as the latest polls now indicate they’ll win 6 seats in the elections. Likud’s Bibi is a corrupt tool, Labor’s Barrack a proven failure, Kadima’s Livni has no vision and carries on the failed policies of the disgraced Olmert, and Yirael Beteinu’s Lieberman wants to chop up Israel into mini-communities of arab and Jew in an absurd, completely unrealistic way.

NU: Peace through resettlement.

2009 February 5

Hi, Alex,

I’m an undecided voter, too! What are your reasons for not voting Chadash? You say they’re too radical for you. Any specific platform?

I’m just wondering since I’ve recently thought of voting for them and I want someone to tell me if there’s a good reason I shouldn’t.

I’m new to Israel and haven’t actually checked with Misrad HaPnim yet about voting, (oops) so this may all be a moot point, but I was just wondering what your specific issue was with Chadash.

2009 February 5

BTW, great post, Alex. Insightful, well written and thoughtful. I predict you vote Kadima, because of all of the ones you described, you attributed the softest negatives to them, and you seem to have an affection for Livni.

BTW, my pal Baruch Marzel will be overseeing the voting in Umm-el-Fahm. Should be a lot of fun, eh!

2009 February 5
Avram permalink

“BTW, my pal Baruch Marzel will be overseeing the voting in Umm-el-Fahm. Should be a lot of fun, eh!”

I have a question MZ – isn’t this the same as asking Bar Rafaeli (dressed in a bikini) to go man the booth in a haredi neighborhood? This is deliberate agitation – and I think you know it.

2009 February 5

Alex,

Waaa, I’ve only been here for one month! But I’ve been an Israeli citizen all my life (lived in Israel until age 11 and just got back). I wonder if that makes a difference on whether I can vote. Meh. I guess I’ll find out today.

I was looking at the Chadash website and got an impression that they were two-state solution people, even though I’d always heard otherwise. I need to figure this out once and for all. And yeah, the whole “Communist party” thing scares me, though they don’t actually seem Communist in practice. I need to look into them more. All these parties are making my head spin.

Thanks for looking at my blog! I’ve been reading your blog for a while but kept being too lazy to post a comment. I’ll stay in touch!

Update us when you decide who to vote for!

May

2009 February 5

Will do!

2009 February 5

Dear Alex,

Re: “they” (Meretz) “remain too elitist, and I can’t stand Amos Oz”

I don’t like Aos Oz AS A WRITER either. But why on earth do you insist on calling Meretz elitists?! It’s allright if you call ME an elitist, but the entire party?!:)

We have Latif Dori, the man who EXPOSED the Kfar Qasim massacre way way back in 1956, working in the same party as Tzvia Greenfeld, the first Haredi woman to be elected to the Knesset. We’ve got gay rights people, enviromentilists, and we recently protested against the rise of public transportation fares and the lack of proper housing at affordable prices in Jerusalem – And somehow we’re too elitist?! Oh please bestow upon me how to be less of an elitist oh great one! What should we humble meretz members do? Eat more hummos? Walk around with a gold chain around our slender neck? What?

Re Hadsash, the party which supports VIOLENT PA “RESISTANCE” AGAINST OUR ARMED FORCES AND CIVILIANS please read this before you cast your vote:

http://www.hahem.co.il/friendsofgeorge/?p=348

Cheers and I appreciate your bleeding proletariat heart my dear Cambridge educated friend!:)

2009 February 5

I have a question MZ – isn’t this the same as asking Bar Rafaeli (dressed in a bikini) to go man the booth in a haredi neighborhood? This is deliberate agitation – and I think you know it.

What is wrong with a Jewish nationalist monitoring the polling stations in an Israeli city? Besides, no other Zionist party could produce a willing representative other than NU, and having an arab monitor the arabs for voting irregularities would be defeating the purpose. What are they afraid of? Will he single handedly expel them all from Israel? Seems a lot less provocative than a gay pride parade in Jerusalem.

2009 February 5

MadZionist – would you have a problem with a Balad representative supervising the election in Kiryat Arba? If your answer is no, then I can find no fault with your reasoning.

2009 February 5

Hagay – I thought that would get you commenting!
A

2009 February 5

MadZionist – would you have a problem with a Balad representative supervising the election in Kiryat Arba?

Alex, since I advocate a Jewish State in which being Jewish is a requirment for citizenship and voting rights, I would not support arabs supervising the elections. I realize you and the others here disagree with this, but it’s an honest answer to your question.

2009 February 5

It is indeed honest.

2009 February 5

MZ, maybe then the answer to your question is this: since your “pal” Baruch Marzel also “advocates a Jewish State in which being Jewish is a requirment for citizenship and voting rights”, this may make him offensive to the Arabs voting in Umm El Fahm no less than Bar Rafaeli in a haredi neighborhood from Avram’s example.
Besides, with pals like this – don’t you know he is a Shabak snitch?

2009 February 5

Re: Marzel – Whether or not it is a deliberate provocation is completely besides the point. That’s free speech. It is preposterous that a city in Israel can vote to decide to not let in an election monitor just because they don’t like his politics. It is not like Bar Refaeli in a bikini walking through a Haredi neighborhood at all – for if you make that analogy, then you are saying that Marzel’s very existence is an affront to Arabs in the same way that forcing Haredi Jews to look at a scantily-dressed woman is. He should be allowed to monitor the elections – and yes, a representative from Balad should be allowed to serve as a monitor in Kiryat Arba, too.

2009 February 5

BTW, Mad Zionist, before you throw a fit, I don’t really know that Marzel is a snitch, all right?
LB, I could imagine somebody like Marzel being an affront to some Arabs, sure. This is a situation of a delicate balance between the democratic right of Baruch Marzel to serve as an election monitor in Umm El Fahm on the one hand, and the feelings of the local Arabs on the other. Not always the democratic right wins. Why, for example, Holocaust denial is a crime in many countries – doesn’t it interfere with free speech? I, actually, would support both repealing Holocaust denial laws and allowing Marzel to monitor elections. I think in these two cases the democratic principle should trump other considerations, but this is only my opinion.

2009 February 5

Peter, if thesei arabs are so upset and hurt over having a Jewish Nationalist monitor elections in their community, I think we should do everything in our power to make sure they don’t get offended like this again. That’s why I advocate resettling them into the surrounding arab world where they won’t have to suffer through such terrible indignation in the future.

2009 February 5

Peter, I’m sure he is an affront to many. However, this is an affront that, as you said, is in line with democratic principle. But I think we’re in agreement here – and regarding the example of Holocaust denial, I am fairly sure there are no such laws on the books in Israel (though Israeli anti-incitement laws cut deep into the ideal of freedom of expression). I have no idea what Germany or France (who have such laws) would do in a comparable situation, but sometimes being affronted comes with membership in a free society.

2009 February 6

Alex, as a big fan of the Green Movement-Meimad, I appreciate your process of elimination and where it led you. I’d leave it at that, but you opened up the discussion again in your last sentence.

I was at a Jerusalem Post sponsored panel in Haifa a couple days ago, and of the eight party representatives, Alon Tal was the only one to formulate a real and optimistic vision for the future of Israel (full disclosure – he is also a good friend). A vision focusing on world class, accessible education, environmental quality, energy independence, and social equality. The Meretz representative was condescending. The Labor rep was actually good – but then again, Barak is their leader. The Likud and Kadima representatives were terrible English speakers (which probably worked in their favor). The three right-wing parties competed with one another over who would be “tougher” with Israeli Arabs and Palestinians.

While I was a supporter before the panel, I came away thinking strongly that Green-Meimad is the only party of vision – of a party that sees a future a social-democratic state, where all streams of Judaism are respected, where all citizens have equal civil rights and no economic discrimination, where Israel leads the world in environmental and energy technologies.

One audience member leaned over and summed up her feeling to me that Green Movement-Meimad seems to be the only party that is “for” something. All the others are against.

Final two thoughts. I refer you to my blog where I collected statements from my friends who are voting for Green-Meimad. And also to writer Haim Watzman’s piece: http://www.jewcy.com/post/go_green#.

Good luck and thanks for the opportunity to weigh in!

2009 February 8
Madzionist permalink

Final stages, Alex. Remember, the National Union favors helping the arabs more than any other party. If you are pro-arab Israeli, and really care about the Arabs getting an opportunity to live meaningful lives with prosperity, free from Jewish apparthied, than the Ichud HaLeumi will be the party that give arabs the dignity of their own self-determination, generous economic compensation, and resettlement into communities that share the same language, relgion, culture and values.

2009 February 8

MadZionist – Zionism can’t succeed without a substantial minority population. So thanks but no thanks.

2009 February 8
Madzionist permalink

Alex, within the Jewish world we have plenty of differences to keep us filled with diversity. The one thing you should never fear amongst Jews is an over-abundance of homogeny!

2009 February 8

Who ever said anything about homogeneity?

2009 February 8
Madzionist permalink

Sorry, what I meant was you will never have within the Jewish people a uniformity. We will have diverse opinions on policies, custom, culture, religion, and everything else that goes into a society. We don’t need to have moslems among us to have profound differences and disagreements that stimulate healthy debate in our society.

2009 February 9

Hey,

I’m still at a loss on who to vote for. How about you? I think I’ll just vote Meretz since my brain is on autopilot at this point. Eeeek.

And PS: When I called to ask about my voting location, they told me it’s at my old elementary school (I lived in Israel until age 11). Apparently, Misrad HaPnim didn’t update my address for the voting cards, so my last known address is the one I had in sixth grade. I guess I’ll awkwardly run into old neighbors and teachers. Yay!

2009 February 9

As Meretz have said they won’t sit in a coalition with Lieberman, I think it’s a pretty good choice. Nice story about your old school – enjoy the voting!

2009 February 9
Gabriel permalink

I think I’d probably vote Meretz although I’d be half-tempted to vote Kadima to keep Bibi out. Hadash is non-Zionist and as such will really have no influence in any coalition I can see. (besides my own ideological difference of opinion). Hadash strikes me as the Ron Paul of Israeli politics. Tonnes of online support, blogs, etc…which make them seem much, much bigger than they are, but when it comes down to it, they will get 3, maybe 4 seats. Elections there are so complicated.

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