Jerusalem Post
 
 
 
Politics:  Looking down from the political peak? 
_By GIL  HOFFMAN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=45)  
10/28/2011  21:16 

Binyamin Netanyahu  goes into the winter session of the Knesset soaring in 
the polls, but there are  plenty of potential pitfalls ahead. 


 
Prime  Minister Binyamin Netanyahu will address the opening meeting of the 
Knesset’s  winter session Monday at what may be the peak of his political 
popularity,  following his successes at the United Nations General Assembly 
and  in bringing home Gilad Schalit and Ilan Grapel.

In both his UN speech and  the Schalit and Grapel deals, he acted as the 
leader of a consensus of Israelis,  earning praise from the Left without 
significantly harming his political base on  the Right.

In fact, a Channel 2 poll on Wednesday night showed Likud  taking 37 seats, 
a gain of 10 seats, were elections to be held today, while  Kadima would 
slump from 28 to 17 seats and Labor, under new leader, Shelly  Yacimovich, 
would take 22 seats compared to just 13 in the last  elections.

Despite repeated requests, even the harshest critics of  Netanyahu 
refrained from criticizing him on the day of Schalit’s release, even  though 
the 
prime minister was seen by many as going overboard in his celebratory  speech 
and smiling photos with Schalit.

“Do you really think we would be  stupid enough to criticize him today?” 
the spokesman of one MK on the Left  said.

Opposition leader Tzipi Livni held back her  criticism of the Schalit deal 
until Sunday, immediately after weekend newspaper  columns questioned her 
silence and saw it as a sign that she had become  irrelevant.

Her reasons for keeping mum were legitimate: She didn’t want  to turn 
Schalit’s fate into a political issue, the deal had been brought to a  vote 
only 
hours after it was revealed (not leaving time for much of a public  debate), 
and Noam Schalit had asked her to keep her opposition to herself for a  few 
days.

But the artificial delay made it look too much like she was  avoiding 
expressing an unpopular opinion that would alienate her political base  on the 
Left. The unwanted attention she received ended up harming her much more  than 
if she had expressed her opposition in real time.

While Netanyahu  will enter the Knesset’s winter session with his party 
united behind him, Livni  will face demands for advancing the Kadima leadership 
primary at her first  faction meeting on Monday. Her chief rival, MK Shaul 
Mofaz, will come to the  Knesset emboldened by the hundreds of supporters 
who attended his annual succa  party in Kochav Yair and unscathed from the 
Schalit debate because he was with  Netanyahu on the popular side.

Those who could cause Netanyahu political  harm have refrained from doing 
so for their own personal and political reasons,  most notably Palestinian 
Authority President Mahmoud Abbas. Had he attempted to  call Netanyahu’s bluff 
and initiated a peace process when Quartet mediators were in town on 
Wednesday, the prime  minister could have entered negotiations that could have 
snowballed into a real  test for his coalition.

With Abbas avoiding the negotiating table, there  is not much dividing 
Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman – who calls the  Palestinian leader “an 
obstacle to peace” – from Netanyahu, who has said that  “my ministers don’t 
think we have a partner on the Palestinian side, but I’d  abstain on that vote.
”

There is no point in alienating Lieberman by  trying to put him in his 
place when Abbas is giving Netanyahu no reason to  contradict the foreign 
minister. And anyway, Lieberman may have to resign by the  time the Knesset’s 
winter session ends in the spring if he doesn’t fare well in  his December 
hearing on the corruption charges against him, so why bother  picking a fight 
with him? 

In another step necessary to keeping his  coalition intact, Netanyahu met 
Sunday night with Shas mentor Rabbi Ovadia  Yosef. The meeting raised 
eyebrows because it was long, initially secret, and  held very late at night.

While there were reports that the issues that  came up in the meeting were 
religious, diplomatic, and related to Schalit,  Grapel and Jonathan Pollard, 
what really needed to be discussed was Shas’s  opposition to the 
Trajtenberg Committee’s socioeconomic  recommendations.

The recommendations are set to be adopted clause by  clause in the Knesset, 
which will provide many opportunities for Shas to give  Netanyahu headaches.

But the main political threat to Netanyahu in the  months ahead could come 
from Hamas and other terrorist groups in the Gaza  Strip. If the rocket 
attacks that began Wednesday on the South  and areas closer to the Center 
intensify, it would certainly harm Netanyahu’s  image as Mr. Security. If a 
connection is proven between the attacks and the  terrorists released in the 
Schalit deal, it could deal him a serious  blow.

His judgment on the deal would be called into question, especially  after 
his having preached against such exchanges for so many years. Livni would  
gain from being on record as opposing the deal, Lieberman and Vice Premier 
Moshe  Ya’alon would be boosted because they voted against it, and Mofaz would 
reap the  benefits of being the main security figure in the opposition.

If that  happens, Netanyahu will discover that just like rockets aimed at 
population  centers, the popularity of a politician at his peak must 
inevitably come  down.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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