2006-07-11-Katzav |
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jewishsightseeing.com, July 11, 2006 |
By Ira Sharkansky
JERUSALEM —There is still news from
Gaza. The IDF continues to pick off the bad guys,
damage bridges and other infrastructure. The
casualties include young boys who cannot resist
hanging around the fighters. There are cries of panic
about only enough food and fuel for a few days, and
competing claims that there is enough for a month, and
that there would be more if the Palestinians would
agree to transfer the stuff through checkpoints that
Israel controls.
But that is not all. Our president,
Moshe Katzav, has got himself into something that
is taking even more media space than Gaza. He claims
that a former employee of the presidential
establishment has tried to blackmail him, with
leverage that she claims is sexual harassment. He says
there was no such thing. She has gone into seclusion,
and her lawyer is saying little. Last night we heard a
commentator describe a 30's something woman of
marginal stability who had harassed the president.
This morning there is a report from another woman that
the president harassed her when she worked for him in
a previous position.
Yesterday's cartoon on the op-ed page
of Ha'aretz showed a nervous president reading
Bill Clinton's biography. Today's shows a referee
approaching the presidential desk holding aloft a red
card. For those not familiar with non-American
football, that is the sign that a player is to be
removed from the game for unsportsperson conduct.
There is about a year left in the
presidential term. Commentators are arguing as to
whether he will finish or go home in shame. His
predecessor left early under a charge of accepting
improper (nonsexual) gifts. From the looks of it,
Israel's presidency is a hazardous occupation.
The office is largely ceremonial. Items
on last nights news, other than the potential scandal,
showed him sipping wine with new ambassadors who had
presented their credentials. He also travels abroad,
shakes a lot of hands, hosts cultural events in the
presidential mansion, expresses himself on the
politically correct side of national controversies,
and attends ceremonies. The rules are that the
audience stands when he enters, and does not leave
until he does.
Like Britain's queen, Israel's
president hears reports on important stuff from the
key individuals who make the real decisions, and may
express his advice. After an election, he consults
with the heads of the parties elected to the Knesset,
and picks the individual he thinks most capable of
forming a government. There is discretion in this
role, but my recollections are that the president has
always, or almost always, given the nod to the head of
the largest party. Unlike the queen, he can aspire to
bigger things. This president was said to be
considering running for the leadership of Likud, and
positioning himself as a possible prime minister. He
had been a Likud Member of Knesset and middle-ranking
government minister before winning the Knesset's
election as president. The Likud is still troubled by
a major loss in the recent election, and mutterings
against its current leader, Benyamin Netanyahu. One of
the speculations is that Katzav's rivals in Likud
leaked the details that started the current
fascination with his personal behavior.
When political observers say that key
figures are only made of flesh and blood, they usually
mean testosterone.
Sharkansky is an emeritus member of the political science department at Hebrew University in Jerusalem |
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