One Leader Who Will be Re-elected: Israel Goes to Elections.(DocsTalk)By Barry Rubin.Israel is apparently going to have elections this autumn and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will almost certainly win by a big margin. Understanding why explains a lot about the country that people think they know the most about but in fact comprehend the least.
According to polls, Netanyahu’s Likud party may go from 28 to
30 seats in the 120-member Knesset. That may not sound like a big percentage but
with around 12 different parties likely to win seats that margin would be
sufficient.
One key element in this equation is that the country is doing
pretty well. True, it faces serious security problems but that’s the norm for
Israel. Indeed, with no other trusted leader on the horizon, Netanyahu is the
one most trusted to manage that dangerous situation.
rue, too, there has
been increasing attention paid to social problems, including the gap between low
salaries and high living costs that provoked protests earlier this year. That
the protests have dissipated and Israel’s economy is doing better—including low
unemployment, low inflation, and manageable state debt--than any other in the
West, partly due to the same economic problems that impose those social
costs.
A third factor is the total fractionalization of the
opposition. Indeed, one might speak of Netanyahu and the seven dwarfs. Aside
from Kadima there are three other mid-sized parties that take votes from the
same potential constituency and quarrel among themselves:
--Kadima, the main opposition party which is vaguely
centrist, is so discredited by its former, failed leader Tzipi Livni that it
will not be saved by its new head, the militarily competent but colorless Shaul
Mofaz, from falling as far as losing 20 of its current 29 seats.
--Labor, which has reinvented itself as a social issues party
has an untested leader who is a radio personality, might come in a distant
second.
--A new centrist party—named, perhaps in wishful thinking for
itself—There is a Future—pushes the same secular centrism that has repeatedly
produced one-election parties before.
--Israel Our Home, headed by Foreign Minister Avigdor
Lieberman, has a solid base among immigrants from the former Soviet Union but by
that very fact—and given the fact that Lieberman is widely disliked and close to
indictment—should hold but not expand its base.
It is ironic to think that the Obama Administration, whose
ignorance of Israel and its politics cannot possibly be overestimated, thought
it was going to bring down Netanyahu and replace him with a more pliable Livni.
In fact, by its periodic bashing of Israel and ham-handed Middle East policy
promoting Israel-hating Islamists, Obama unintentionally mobilized domestic
support for Netanyahu.
Speaking about myths about Israel and Israeli politics here
are some of the main ones:
--Netanyahu is no longer a “right-winger” in the way he was
15 years ago. He has moved into the center, a key factor explaining his
success.
--Israelis do not believe they have a peace option at
present, with the Palestinians uninterested in a deal and Egypt, Iran, Turkey,
the Gaza Strip, Lebanon, and Syria in an all-out hostile mode.
--There is no faith in U.S backing given the Obama
Administration’s views and actions.
--Israeli are neither stupid—giving away everything, as the
foreign right often seems to think—or evil, as the foreign left definitely does
think.
Barry
Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA)
Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA)
Journal. His
book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University
Press. Other
recent books include The
Israel-Arab Reader (seventh
edition), The Long War for
Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East (Wiley), and The Truth About Syria (Palgrave-Macmillan). The website
of the GLORIA Center and
of his blog, Rubin
Reports.
His original articles are published at PJMedia.

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