2006-03-23—Israel election campaign |
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jewishsightseeing.com, March 23, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM—It is common to describe economics is
the dismal science, insofar as it focuses on resources, that are
always less than required to meet all desires.
Politics, in contrast, is the happy science, marked
by individuals with overblown egos promising to meet all the wants
in order to garner support.
Israel's proportional representation provides an
ideal stage for the display of the happy science. Almost all of
the two dozen or so parties running for seats in the Knesset
display the wants of the nation. Virtually none take into account
limited resources. Economists are left at home, or required to put
their training on the shelf before being allowed to speak for
a party.
The World Bank counts Israel among the world's
richest economies. Fine. But it is at the lower end of the list,
above only Greece and Portugal. Israel's politicians hear about
the programs on offer in northwestern Europe, and demand those for
Israel. But Israel is poorer. And Israel's limited resources
support security forces several times more expensive than those of
wealthy European countries that rely on others to look after their
defense.
The one party that is prominent in emphasizing
sacrifice is the party likely to lead the government. Kadima is
selling the idea of removing some Jewish settlements from the West
Bank. That, and the less than charismatic personality of its
leading figure, may explain its slide in the polls since Ariel
Sharon exited politics and enjoyed a couple of weeks of
being sanctified by media that ignored all the sins that had
been emphasized until then. It is in the Jewish tradition to
praise the dead. One does not hear criticism during memorial
visits, and seldom even a bit of humor about the dearly departed.
Bastards turn into saints at their death. Sharon has not died. One
day he may wake up from his coma to read what stood as his
obituaries. It is doubtful that he will be able to do more than
that.
The promises of other parties are more suitable to
political theater than to any serious discussion of policy
analysis. The leading candidate of the Labor Party, Amir Peretz, has
been true to his Labor Federation roots by emphasizing the need to
raise the minimum wage. He has not commented on an analysis that
appeared in Ha'aretz that showed Israel's minimum wage is already
about the highest in the world, in relation to a per capita
measure of overall economic resources.
The leader of Likud, Benyamin Netanyahu, admits
that he may have angered voters by his policy as finance minister
to reduce payments to the aged, poor, and large families. Now he
promises to backtrack, and solve the social problems he caused. He
also claims that the economic progress due to his policy provides
the resources for dealing with the needy. He does not consider
that the recent increase in Israel's economic well being might
have something to do with an international economic recovery
affecting countries that buy what Israel sells, and whose
investors send money to Israeli industries.
Except for Likud, right wing nationalist and
religious parties are doing well in the polls. Moreover, their
supporters are angry about withdrawal from Gaza, intense, and
likely to turn out in high numbers. Voters who are secular and
inclined to the center are demonstrating a higher than usual
disinterest in the election. Many are answering that they have
not made up their minds. The implications of all this is that
Olmert will have trouble enacting and/or implementing a policy
of further withdrawals from Jewish settlements in the West Bank.
Beyond the major and middle-sized parties, one can
find a great lack of restraint in what parties offer their
potential voters. You can probably guess what the Pensioners'
Party is offering the voters. Israel like other western countries
has a large and growing proportion of us old folks. Some are truly
poor, especially immigrants who did not work here long enough to
build up entitlements, and must rely on the minimum payments that
do not allow them to live without help from younger family members
or soup kitchens that feed them hot meals. Many of the aged who
are better off would enjoy an increase in their National Insurance
payments. One poll indicates that the Pensioners' Party might, for
the first time, win enough votes for two members, which is the
minimum for entering the Knesset. Some polls show them capable of
winning three or even four seats.
A Green Leaf party has returned once again. It is
trying for its first successful campaign by expanding its basic
demand of legalizing marijuana for recreational and medical
purposes. It also demands greater rights for homosexuals and
lesbians, including single sex marriages. A clever ad campaign has
attracted attention, and brought the party to the verge of getting
into the Knesset.
A Green Party demands environmental protection at
least as good as the best in the world. Israelis, alas, are more
interested in issues of security and basic well-being. The Greens
do not look like they will make it to the Knesset.
There are several extreme right wing parties and
religious parties trying to get traction by campaigning to
transfer Arabs to one place or another, and against the
imperfections of more established religious and nationalist
parties. An Ethiopian Party is somewhere out there, not seeming to
make much of an impression. What had been a successful, middle
size anti-religious party has split into two due to personality
squabbles, and neither of the factions is showing enough support
to enter the Knesset. A retired general has not made a dent by
emphasizing corruption, due perhaps to his poor ad campaign and
his refusal to align with other small parties that had offered him
a place on their list. A group of Arab parties will get their
usual 10 or so seats. Most likely they will spend the next few
years reciting their usual criticisms of whatever the Jewish
government is doing. I have not noticed a taxi drivers' party in
this year's competition. Perhaps it coalesced with something else
below my radar screen.
My favorite candidate for the most bizarre is a
party that combines a concern to find the true killer of Yitzhak
Rabin with a strident anti-feminism. Its ads criticize women and
the left, and emphasize the poor shake given fathers in divorce
and child custody. No one has explained to me the connection
between its view of the assassination and its other demands. Anger
is the most prominent feature of the few media spots available to
it as a new party without Knesset members, and it has not made a
dent in the polls.
We will know the results late Tuesday night or
early the next day. Then the story will only be half over. It will
be another month or two before the winner can announce the make up
of a governing coalition.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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