Jerusalem Post
 
Livni to split Center-Left with new centrist party   
By _GIL  HOFFMAN_ (http://www.jpost.com/Authors/AuthorPage.aspx?id=45) 
11/22/2012 23:09
Tzipi Livni's list will reportedly be called the  "National Responsibility 
Party"; poll: new party would win nine  seats.

 
The splintered Center-Left will become even more divided at the beginning 
of  next week when former Kadima head and foreign minister Tzipi Livni is 
expected  to form a new party with allies from Kadima and new candidates who 
scored well  in polls. 
Livni’s list will reportedly be called the “National Responsibility Party,”
  using the name that Livni suggested for Kadima when it was formed at 
former  prime minister Ariel Sharon’s Negev ranch in November 2005.
 
The party will attempt to provide the “different kind of politics” Livni  
envisioned for Kadima before it became enveloped in the same internal 
corruption  that plagued the Likud central committee. 
To that end, politicians involved in legal troubles like former prime  
minister Ehud Olmert and former minister Haim Ramon will not be on the list.  
Olmert is expected to announce that he will not run in the January 22 election 
 at a press conference on Sunday.
 
Instead the list will feature Maj.-Gen. (res.) Shlomo Yanai, the respected  
former chairman of Teva Pharmaceuticals, who built up the company’s annual  
earnings from $8.4 billion to $22b. in five years. A former OC Southern 
Command,  Yanai’s experience dealing with the Gaza Strip could be a key asset 
for the  party following Operation Pillar of Defense. 
The list will also include Israel Space Agency chairman Isaac Ben-Israel, 
who  is also a retired major-general, a professor, and briefly a Kadima MK; 
sucker  tent protest leader Boaz Nol, and former ambassador to France Daniel 
Shek. 
The only MKs Livni intends to take from Kadima are her allies Yoel Hasson,  
Shlomo Molla, Rachel Adatto, Orit Zuaretz, and Robert Tibayev. 
Prof. Manuel Trajtenberg, who headed the government committee that 
responded  to the July 2011 tent protests, had been talked about as a possible 
candidate,  but he did not leave his government post in time in order to be 
legally  permitted to run. 
A Kadima official responded that Livni was still a member of Kadima and 
noted  that she said at a public forum two weeks ago that it would be wrong to 
further  divide the Center-Left bloc. 
“Tzipi Livni is not missed,” the official said. “She has failed time and 
time  again, brought down the party to single digits in the polls, and left 
it NIS 30  million in debt, so who would give her another chance?”  
A Channel 2 poll broadcast Thursday night on Nissim Mishal’s television 
show  found that Likud-Beytenu would win 38 seats. The poll also found that 
Livni’s  new party would win nine seats, taking support away from Kadima, which 
it  predicted would not pass the electoral threshold, Labor which was shown 
to win  19 seats and Yair Lapid’s Yesh Atid Party, which would win only 
four seats. 
A Panels poll broadcast Thursday on the Knesset Channel found that the  
Likud’s support had fallen to 33 seats due to the public’s opposition to _the 
ceasefire that ended Operation Pillar of Defense_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/DiplomacyAndPolitics/Article.aspx?id=292989)  on  
Wednesday. The poll found that 
the main beneficiaries of the public’s  frustration was Habayit Hayehudi, 
which according to the poll would win 13  mandates and MK Arieh Eldad’s new 
Strength for Israel Party, with four  seats.

-- 
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